Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 93South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Bilobrk N.O. and Others (3820/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 93 (10 March 2022)
Judgment
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Bilobrk N.O. and Others (3820/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 93 (10 March 2022)
ABSA Bank Limited v Bilobrk N.O. and Others (3820/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 93 (10 March 2022)
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sino date 10 March 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
number: 3820/2020
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
SRECKO
ANTUN BILOBRK
N.O.
First defendant
KEVIN
MARK BAILEY
N.O.
Second defendant
DELIA
VANESSA BAILEY
N.O.
Third defendant
KEVIN
MARK
BAILEY
Fourth defendant
DELIA
VANESSA
BAILEY
Fifth defendant
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 10 MARCH 2022
VAN
ZYL AJ:
# Introduction
Introduction
#
1.
The plaintiff sued the defendants on
seven mortgage loan agreements concluded between the plaintiff and
the first to third defendants
(“the Trust”) between 21
June 2000 and 21 June 2007, and upon suretyships executed by the
fourth and fifth defendants
(“the sureties”) in which
they bound themselves jointly and severally as sureties and
co-principal debtors
in solidum
in favour of the plaintiff for due payment by the Trust of all
amounts owing to the plaintiff under the mortgage loan agreements.
2.
In terms of the provisions of the
suretyships, the sureties would be liable for the payment of legal
costs on the scale as between
attorney and client in proceedings
taken by the plaintiff to enforce the suretyships.
3.
The loans were secured by mortgage bonds
registered against the immovable property situated at Erf 11232
Durbanville, also known
as 23 Belvedere Street, Belvedere Estate,
Durbanville. The property is registered in the name of the Trust. In
terms of the provisions
of each of the mortgage bonds, the Trust
would be liable for the payment of legal costs on the scale as
between attorney and client
in proceedings instituted to obtain
payment under the bonds.
4.
The Trust subsequently failed to pay the
bond instalments punctually and incurred substantial arrears, hence
the action. The defendants
gave notice of intention to defend the
action. As a result of their failure timeously to deliver their plea,
they were placed under
bar under Rule 26 during June 2020.
5.
There are, arising from this background,
three applications before this Court.
6.
The first is the sureties’
application to uplift the bar to deliver their plea and counterclaim,
which application was launched
on 24 March 2021 (“the
upliftment application”).
7.
The second is the plaintiff’s
application for default judgment against the sureties, should the
upliftment application be
unsuccessful.
8.
The third is an application brought by
the first to third defendants (“the Trust”, being the
principal debtor in the
proceedings instituted by the plaintiff) for
the rescission of a default judgment granted by this Court (the
Honourable Mr Justice
Samela presiding) on 27 October 2021 (“the
rescission application”). The rescission application was set
down in the
unopposed motion court for 3 February 2022, but the
parties agreed that such application would be postponed and heard
together
with the other two applications.
9.
In a practice note delivered by the
defendants’ counsel prior to the hearing, and (albeit
obliquely) in the founding affidavit
delivered in the rescission
application, the defendants indicated that, in the alternative to
rescission, they sought a variation
to the reserve price placed on
the sale of the property for the reason that the reserve price set by
the Court was, so the defendants
indicated, only about half of the
price actually realised in a private sale.
10.
The history pertaining to these
applications will be set out below, as it is important to see where
the applications fit in the
context of the litigation as a whole. I
shall thereafter discuss the merits of, respectively, the upliftment
application (in conjunction
with the plaintiff’s application
for default judgment) and the rescission application.
The
history of the litigation to date
11.
The plaintiff’s summons was served
on the defendants during February 2020. On 6 March 2020 the
defendant’s counsel (who,
I understand, holds a trust account
under the provisions of the
Legal Practice Act, 2014
, and may thus be
briefed by his clients directly) emailed to the plaintiff’s
attorneys a notice of intention to defend the
action.
12.
On 18 June 2020 the plaintiff served a
demand for plea in terms of
Rule 26
on the defendants. The defendants
failed subsequently to deliver their plea within the five-day period
prescribed in
Rule 26
, and they were therefore barred from doing so
afterwards.
13.
On 30 June 2020 the second/fourth
defendant (“Mr Bailey”), purporting to act on behalf of
all of the defendants, served
a plea and counterclaim. The plea and
counterclaim were signed by Mr Bailey in person.
14.
On 15 July 2020 Mr Bailey, again purporting to act on behalf of all
of the defendants,
brought an application for upliftment of the bar
in terms of
Rule 27
(“the first upliftment application”).
The first upliftment application was argued on 27 January 2021 before
the Honourable
Justice Steyn. The Court handed down judgment on the
same day, ordering as follows:
“
10.1 The application for
upliftment of the bar vis-à-vis the first, second and third
defendants is dismissed, with no order
as to costs;
10.2 The application for the
upliftment of the bar brought by the fourth and fifth defendants is
struck from the roll and
the fourth and fifth defendants shall pay
the wasted costs occasioned by the matter being struck from the roll
on an attorney and
client scale.”
15.
In the first upliftment application the
plaintiff also disputed Adv. Shaw’s authority to act on behalf
of the defendants and
delivered a
Rule 7(1)
notice requesting Adv.
Shaw to provide proof of its authority to act on behalf of the Trust.
Adv. Shaw failed to respond to the
Rule 7(1)
notice and therefore
lacked the authority to act on behalf of the Trust. This was dealt
with in the judgment of the Honourable
Justice Steyn.
16.
On 24 March 2021 Mr Bailey brought a
further application for upliftment of the bar. This is the present
upliftment application.
In the upliftment application Mr Bailey again
purported to act on behalf of all of the parties, including the
Trust. A comparison
between the founding affidavit in the present
upliftment application and the grounds advanced in the first
upliftment application
reveals that the present application is
brought on the same basis as the first one.
17.
The first upliftment application had
been dismissed on 27 January 2021 in relation to the Trust. In the
premises, the plaintiff
raised the defence of
res
judicata
to the Trust’s
attempt to revive the issue, and proceeded with an application for
default judgment against the Trust as well
as against the sureties,
including an order declaring the Trust’s immovable property
specially executable. This application
for default judgment was set
down in motion court for 27 October 2021.
18.
Mr Bailey (assisted, it seems, by the
defendants’ counsel, Adv. Shaw), set the second upliftment
application (that is, the
present upliftment application) down for
hearing on 15 October 2021. On that day the matter was heard
virtually by the Honourable
Justice Mangcu-Lockwood. The Court struck
the matter from the roll, with costs, on the basis of the irregular
set down of the matter
by Mr Bailey and/or the defendants’
counsel.
19.
On 20 October 2021 the plaintiff’s
attorneys received an email from advocate Shaw setting down what
appeared to be the present
upliftment application, purporting to act
on behalf of the second to fifth defendants. The matter was “set
down” for
27 October 2021 at 09:30 “
for
an online hearing
” together
with the plaintiff’s application for default judgment and
Rule
46A
application declaring the immovable property executable.
20.
On 27 October 2021 the plaintiff’s
counsel, Mr Wessels, appeared before the Honourable Justice Samela in
the unopposed motion
court to move the application for default
judgment and for an order in terms of
Rule 46A.
The Court granted
default judgment against the Trust, including an order declaring the
immovable property executable. It postponed
the application for
default judgment against the sureties as well as the present
upliftment application to 7 February 2022, given
that the fate of the
sureties’ upliftment application would influence the further
conduct of the application for default
judgment against them.
21.
Mr Bailey thereafter launched a
rescission application, seeking to rescind the default judgment and
execution order granted against
the Trust on 27 October 2021.
22.
I proceed to deal with the three applications now serving
before the Court.
The
upliftment application
The
relevant legal principles
23.
Rule 27(1) and (2) of the Uniform Rules
of Court read as follows:
“
27
Extension of time and removal of bar and condonation
(1) In the
absence of agreement between the parties, the court may upon
application on notice and on good
cause shown, make an order
extending or abridging any time prescribed by these rules or by an
order of court or fixed by an order
extending or abridging any time
for doing any act or taking any step in connection with any
proceedings of any nature whatsoever
upon such terms as to it seems
meet.
(2) Any such
extension may be ordered although the application therefor is not
made until after expiry of the
time prescribed or fixed, and the
court ordering any such extension may make such order as to it seems
meet as to the recalling,
varying or cancelling of the results of the
expiry of any time so prescribed or fixed, whether such results flow
from the terms
of any order or from these rules.”
24.
Rule 27(1) requires a party to show good
cause for extending or abridging any time period prescribed by the
rules. Although there
is no exhaustive definition of what constitutes
good cause, two principal requirements must be satisfied:
24.1.
First, the applicant should
satisfactorily explain the delay (
Dalhouzie
v Bruwer
1970 (4) SA 566
(C) at 571F
and 572C)
. The defendant must at least
furnish an explanation of his default sufficiently full to enable the
Court to understand how it came
about and to assess his conduct and
motives (
Silber v Ozen Wholesalers Ltd
1954 (2) SA 345
(A) at 353A)
.
A full and reasonable explanation, which covers the entire period of
delay, must be given (
Van Wyk v Unitas
Hospital
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC) at
477E-G).
24.2.
Secondly, the applicant should satisfy
the court on oath that he has a
bona
fide
defence or that his action is
not ill-founded, as the case may be (
Dalhouzie
supra
). The applicant must show that
his defence is not patently unfounded and that it is based upon
facts, which, if proved, would constitute
a defence (
Du
Plooy v Anwes Motors (Edms) Bpk
1983
(4) SA 212
(O) at 217H).
25.
Further to the issue of good cause, the
requirements for the successful removal of a bar have been held to be
the following (see
Smith N.O. v
Brummer N.O.
1954 (3) SA 352
(O)
at 358A)
:
25.1.
The applicant must give a reasonable
explanation for his delay.
25.2.
The application must be
bona
fide
and not made with the object of
delaying the opponent’s claim.
25.3.
There should not be a reckless or
intentional disregard of the Rules of Court.
25.4.
The applicant’s action (or
defence, in the present matter) must not be ill-founded and any
prejudice caused to the opposite
party by the grant of the indulgence
sought by the applicant must be able to be compensated for by an
appropriate order as to costs.
26.
Lastly, in
Ferris
v Firstrand Bank Limited
2014 (3) SA 39
(CC) at 43G-44A
the
Constitutional Court held that the test for condonation is whether it
is in the interests of justice to grant it. An applicant’s
prospects of success and the importance of the issues to be
determined are relevant factors to be considered.
The
sureties’ upliftment application
27.
This Court (the Honourable Justice Steyn
presiding) dismissed the Trust’s first upliftment application
in January 2021. The
Trust has not sought to impugn that decision on
any legal basis available to it. It is therefore not before me. The
only issue
that falls to be decided is whether the sureties have
established good cause for uplifting the bar. The defendants’
counsel
acknowledged this to be the case in the course of argument.
28.
The sureties’ explanation as to
why they were unable timeously to deliver the plea or counterclaim
is, in my view, insufficient.
Mr Bailey mainly blames the Covid-19
lockdown for the defendants’ difficulties in consulting with
their counsel (who lives
in Johannesburg) and for their lack of funds
to pay their counsel. He fails to give a full account of the entire
period of delay.
Given the electronic means available (the present
matter was dealt with virtually) the Covid-19 lockdown cannot be an
explanation
for their delay. The plaintiff’s notice of bar was
delivered on 18 June 2020, well after the commencement of lockdown.
29.
Mr Bailey states that his counsel was
unable to access the files relating to the case, and was unable to
consult legal libraries
or to discuss aspects of the case with other
legal professionals. No details are given as to why his counsel was
isolated to such
an extreme extent. Moreover, given that a plea and
counterclaim were in fact produced shortly after the defendants had
been placed
under bar, the excuse relating to counsel’s
inability to access the necessary documentation and to take
instructions rings
hollow.
30.
The sureties have also not given a
satisfactory explanation as to why they elected to instruct counsel
who lives in Johannesburg,
especially under Covid-19 circumstances.
Mr Bailey lives in Cape Town, where there are many competent counsel
at the defendants’
disposal. In a replying affidavit Mr Bailey
indicates that he knows Adv. Shaw and that the latter has experience
in “
assisting against banks
”.
He is “
not aware of anyone in
Cape Town that does this though there may be, of course.
”
31.
Mr Bailey explains further that the
defendants were under the impression that the
dies
would not apply during the lockdown. How the defendants came to this
conclusion is not explained. A further explanation proffered
is that
Mr Bailey received an application for the sequestration of the Trust,
to which he had to devote his resources. As a result
he had to
“
ignore the ABSA matter for the
time being
”. This was an
intentional disregard of the Rules of Court.
32.
Lastly, Mr Bailey pointed out that “
it
has transpired that the same or similar fraud has been committed by
the same ABSA staff against another person and my counsel
has been
trying to contact him (now living in Ireland) to establish the facts
in that case. This would have been difficult with
or without lockdown
and has caused delay
”. This is
not a reason for failing timeously to deliver pleadings in a separate
action. Any relevant information obtained
from such other person
could have been used at a later stage; if necessary, by an
appropriate amendment to the plea and counterclaim.
33.
In the circumstances, the sureties have
not properly explained the delay in delivering their pleadings.
34.
The second requirement the sureties must
meet is to satisfy the Court that they have a
bona
fide
defence or that their defence
is not ill-founded. In the present case, that entails that they have
presented a
bona fide
defence
in their plea and a
bona fide
counterclaim, or that such defence
and counterclaim are founded on facts which, if proven in due course,
would establish a defence
and counterclaim against the plaintiff.
35.
It has already been mentioned that the
plea and counterclaim delivered on 30 June 2020 were signed on by Mr
Bailey seemingly in
his personal capacity. There is no credible
evidence on record that he had been authorised to prepare and deliver
the pleadings.
The confirmatory affidavit by the fifth defendant, in
which she authorised Mr Bailey to act on her behalf, was deposed to
on 15
February 2021, eight months after delivery of the plea and
counterclaim. A power of attorney purportedly granted to Adv. Shaw to
represent the defendants is dated 15 June 2021, three months after
the institution of the second upliftment application, and a
year
after the delivery of the pleadings.
36.
There is no evidence indicating that the
Trust and the fifth defendant were aware of the contents of the plea
and counterclaim and
they were in agreement with its contents.
37.
Be that as it may, an analysis of the
counterclaim attached to the replying affidavit in the second
upliftment application indicates,
inter
alia
the following:
37.1.
The defendants purport to claim R45
million in damages against the plaintiff and a certain Mr Royd,
jointly and severally. However,
Mr Royd is not a party to the
proceedings. There is thus a material non-joinder of Mr Royd to the
proceedings.
37.2.
The counterclaim lacks the necessary
factual averments to sustain a damages claim for R45 million against
the plaintiff and is excipiable.
37.3.
The alleged losses (including the R45
million) relied upon in the counterclaim occurred – according
to the allegations in
the counterclaim - more than three years ago,
in 2010. Consequently, any claim that the defendants might have had
in this regard
became prescribed in terms of
section 11(d)
of the
Prescription Act, 1969
.
38.
In the plea (also attached to the
replying affidavit in the second upliftment application), the
defendants mainly rely on their
intended counterclaim as their
defence. As mentioned with above, the counterclaim fails to disclose
a cause of action against the
plaintiff. The defendants also alleges
that the bonds on which the plaintiffs rely have been securitised,
but fails to plead any
facts in support of such allegation. This is
clearly a speculative defence.
39.
In all of these circumstances, the sureties
have not made out a case that their defence and counterclaim are
well-founded and that
there are at least some prospects of
success in a trial in due course. The information at the Court’s
disposal does not indicate
that the defence and
counterclaim can be regarded as being
bona
fide
(see
Dalhouzie
supra
at 574H-575A).
40.
Considering all of these issues, I
conclude that the sureties have failed to establish good cause within
the meaning of
Rule 27(1)
, and that it is not in the interests of
justice to uplift the bar.
The
plaintiff’s application for default judgment against the
sureties
41.
It follows then that the plaintiff is
entitled to default judgment against the sureties, jointly and
severally with each other and
with the first, second and third
defendants, the one paying, the other to be absolved, for:
41.1.
Condonation of the plaintiff’s
failure to annex to its particulars of claim true copies of the
mortgage loan agreements in
terms of
Rule 18(6).
1.48cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; line-height: 200%">
41.2.
Payment of the amount of R3 551 823,79.
41.3.
Interest on R3 551 823, 79 at
the rate of 10,00% per annum, calculated on daily outstanding
balances and capitalised monthly
on the first day of each month from
7 January 2020 to date of payment, both dates inclusive.
41.4.
Costs of suit on the scale as between
attorney and client.
The
rescission application
The
relevant legal principles
42.
The application for the rescission of the default judgment granted
against the
Trust on 27 October 2021 has been instituted by Mr Bailey
on behalf of the Trust. The application is brought in terms of
Rule
42(1)(a)
on the ground that the default judgment was erroneously
sought or granted in the absence of Mr Bailey.
43.
Rule 42(1)(a)
provides as follows:
“
The court may, in addition
to any other powers it may have, mero motu or upon the application of
any party affected, rescind or
vary:
(a)
an order or judgement erroneously sought or erroneously
granted in the absence of any party affected thereby”.
44.
It
has been held that a judgment has been erroneously granted if there
existed at the time of its issue a fact of which the Judge
was
unaware, which would have precluded the granting of the judgment
and which would have induced the Judge, if he had been
aware of it,
not to grant the judgment (
Nyingwa
v Moolman NO
1993
(2) SA 508
(Tk)
at 510D-G).
45.
The applicant need not show good cause
in the sense of an explanation for his default, or a
bona
fide
defence. Once the
applicant can point to an error in the proceedings, he is without
further ado entitled to rescission. When
he cannot rely on an error
he has to proceed in terms of
Rule 31(2)(b)
(where he was in
default of delivery of a notice of intention to defend or of a plea)
or on the common law (in all other cases).
In both of the latter
instances he must show good cause (
Bakoven Limited v G J
Howes (Pty) Ltd
1992 (2) SA 466
(E) at 471H)
.
46.
The Court is not confined to the record of the
proceedings in deciding whether a judgment was erroneously granted
(
Lodhi 2 Prop Inv CC v Bondev Devs (Pty)
Ltd
2007 (6) SA 87
(SCA) at paras [22]-
[24])
.
47.
In
Promedia Drukkers & Uitgewers (Edms) Bpk v Kaimowitz &
Others
1996 (4) SA 411
(C) at 417G-I the Court summarised the
circumstances under which relief will be granted under
Rule 42(1)(a)
as follows:
“
Relief
will be granted under this Rule if there was an irregularity in the
proceedings …; if the Court lacked legal competence
to have
made the order …; and if the Court, at the time the order
was made, was unaware of facts which, if known to
it, would have
precluded the granting of the order …. It is not necessary for
an applicant to show 'good cause' for the
Rule to apply ….”
48.
I proceed to consider the Trust’s application for rescission.
The
plaintiff’s point
in limine
49.
The plaintiff has raised a point
in limine
as regards Mr
Bailey’s authority to institute the rescission application on
the Trust’s behalf. Mr Bailey does not
state in his founding
affidavit in what capacity he is bringing the application, that is,
whether in his personal capacity as fourth
defendant or in his
representative capacity as trustee of the Trust. If the application
is brought in his representative capacity,
he fails to state that the
institution of the application was duly authorised by the Trust, and
that he had been authorised to
act on behalf of all of the trustees.
50.
This omission is significant, because the Trust has three trustees,
being the
first to third defendants in the action. This is apparent
from the Letters of Authority issued by the Master on 19 November
2018.
Mr Bailey argues that the first respondent has since been
removed as trustee by resolution of the second and third defendants.
There is no indication on the papers before the Court that the Master
has issued amended Letters of Authority. There is, however,
a copy of
a resolution taken by the second and third defendants on 29 April
2021 to the effect that the first defendant be removed
as trustee. In
terms of clause 9.6 of the trust deed the office of any trustee shall
be vacated if such trustee “
is removed from office by
majority vote of all trustees
”.
51.
On a proper interpretation of clause 9.6, I am not convinced that the
first
defendant has in fact been removed as trustee. The resolution
is signed by only two trustees, and there is no indication on the
papers that all three trustees were present at the meeting at which
the resolution was taken. Clause 9.6 requires a majority vote
of “
all
trustees
”, that is, all three trustees should be afforded
the opportunity to vote. Without the first defendant’s
involvement,
the remaining trustees could not act in terms of clause
9.6 so as to remove the first defendant from his office. It is
unlikely
that the first defendant is aware of the fact that the
rescission application has been instituted on the Trust’s
behalf.
52.
In addition, on 25 November 2021 the plaintiff delivered a notice in
terms of
Rule 7(1)
disputing the authority of Mr Bailey and Adv. Shaw
to represent the Trust in the rescission application. There has been
no response
to that notice, and it is not dealt with at all in the
replying affidavit, despite it being raised by the plaintiff in its
answering
affidavit in opposition to the application.
Rule 7(1)
provides as follows:
“
Subject
to the provisions of subrules (2) and (3) a power of attorney to act
need not be filed, but the authority of anyone acting
on behalf of a
party may, within 10 days after it has come to the notice of a party
that such person is so acting, or with the
leave of the court on good
cause shown at any time before judgment, be disputed, whereafter such
person may no longer act unless
he satisfied the court that he is
authorised so to act, and to enable him to do so the court may
postpone the hearing of the action
or application.”
53.
It is trite that under common law the trustees must act together in
binding
the trust, save where the trust deed stipulates differently
(
Land & Agricultural Bank of South Africa v
Parker
2005 (2) SA 77
(SCA) at 85A-C)
.
All trustees must participate or act together either by way of
unanimous or majority vote. A decision taken in absence of all
of the
trustees and without their knowledge is irregular. In legal
proceedings by and against a trust, a resolution is required
authorising the institution of legal proceedings, otherwise the trust
is not properly before the court (
Steyn v
Blockpave (Pty) Ltd
2011 (3) SA 528
(FB) at para [40]).
54.
The power of attorney dated 15 June 2021 provided in the upliftment
application
(it was not included in the record of the rescission
application) stipulated that “
Kevin Bailey and Delia Bailey
in our personal capacities and as trustees of the Bailey Trust
”
appoint Adv. Shaw to act on their behalf. In the absence of the first
defendant, the power of attorney could not validly
have been given on
the Trust’s behalf, and thus Adv. Shaw may not represent the
Trust in the rescission application.
55.
In the present case, Mr Bailey has not proven that he is duly
authorised on
behalf of the Trust to bring the rescission
application. In the circumstances, I agree with the plaintiff that
the Trust is not
properly before the Court and that the institution
of the rescission application was not properly authorised.
The
merits of the rescission application
25.
In case I am wrong in my conclusion upon the point
in limine
,
I shall deal with the merits of the rescission application. The
litigation history leading up to the granting of the default judgment
has already been set out. The events of 26 and 27 October 2021 are
particularly pertinent to the application.
26.
The plaintiff brought the application for default judgment against
the defendants
during August 2021. It was set down for hearing in the
motion court on 27 October 2021. As mentioned earlier, Mr Bailey
purported
to set down the second upliftment application (instituted
in March 2021) for hearing on 15 October 2021. It was struck from the
roll because of the improper set down. On 20 October 2021 the
plaintiff’s attorneys received an email from Adv. Shaw with
a
notice of set down relating to what appeared to be the second
upliftment application. The matter was set down for 27 October
2021
at 09:30 “
for an online hearing
” together with the
application for default judgment.
27.
Neither Mr Bailey nor Adv. Shaw filed a practice note in respect of
the second
upliftment application so set down for 27 October 2021. On
26 October 2021 Mr Jonker, the plaintiff’s counsel, filed his
practice note. The practice note set out some of the history of the
litigation and included submissions as to why the default judgment
should be granted. Mr Jonker pointed out that the application for
default judgment against the sureties should be postponed to
the
semi-urgent roll to be heard together with the second upliftment
application.
28.
Mr Jonker became unavailable to attend to the matter on the
plaintiff’s
behalf on 27 October 2021, and Mr Wessels was
briefed to appear. The Honourable Justice Samela was the duty judge
for motion court
on 27 October 2021, and the Honourable Acting
Justice Montzinger was the urgent duty judge who dealt with urgent
applications,
which did not include the application for default
judgment or the second upliftment application.
29.
A day before the hearing, on 26 October 2021, Adv. Shaw sent an email
to Acting
Justice Montzinger’s registrar, Ms Veerapen,
indicating that he would appear on behalf of the defendants and that
“
this would be a virtual hearing
”. He requested
the invitation to the virtual hearing to be emailed to him. The
plaintiff’s attorney, Mr Fourie, was
copied in on the email.
30.
Ms Veerapen replied to the email, advising that the matter was not on
the urgent
roll for the next day. Mr Fourie forwarded Adv. Shaw’s
email to Mr Wessels, who addressed an email to Ms Veerapen and Adv.
Shaw on 26 October 2021 at 15:10 in which he indicated,
inter
alia
, that he had been briefed to appear in the application for
default judgment on the plaintiff’s behalf. The application was
on the motion court roll before Justice Samela, and would be dealt
with “
in open court (and not virtually
)”. There
was no application relevant to the matter before Acting Justice
Montzinger on the urgent roll for the next day.
31.
In a subsequent email sent at 16:27, Mr Wessels referred to the
notice of set
down received on 20 October 2021 and enquired from Ms
Veerapen whether the second upliftment application was in fact on the
urgent
roll. On 27 October 2021, at 09:07, Adv. Shaw sent a further
email to Mr Veerapen, requesting her to confirm that neither matter
was on the urgent roll. At 09:12 Mr Wessels replied to Adv. Shaw,
indicating that Ms Veerapen had confirmed to him that the
applications
were not before Acting Justice Montzinger. He added that
the application for default judgment was “
enrolled as matter
no. 24 on the motion court roll before Judge Samela and would be
dealt with in open court in court 16 at 10:00
or as soon thereafter
as the matter may be heard
”.
32.
Also at 09:12, Adv. Shaw sent an email to Ms Veerapen in which he
stated: “
Please also note that should either of the matters
be on the roll, that I am in Johannesburg and generally appear online
as a result
of the risk of the pandemic
”.
33.
At 10:01, after the commencement of motion court and despite the
earlier email
from Mr Wessels as to where the application for default
judgment was to be dealt with, Adv. Shaw again emailed Ms Veerapen,
as
follows:
“
I spoke to my client Mr
Kevin Bailey and he mentioned that he gave the file to you on Monday
for the removal of bar and mentioned
that I was in Johannesburg. The
removal of bar was to be heard with (or instead of) the other
applications. He tells me you informed
him it would be heard by
another honourable judge who heard the online hearings.
None of the hearings for this case
have ever taken place in open court, they have always been online.
ABSA’s and its legal
team are well aware of this.
Obviously if any of these matters are
held in open court my client will be severely prejudiced as I won’t
be there to defend
him being in Gauteng. Even my client himself is
far from Cape Town at this time.
Please can you arrange for the
matter to be enrolled on the online roll or for all the matters to be
removed from the roll until
be can sort this out.
”
34.
This email did not immediately come to Mr Wessels’ attention,
as he was,
by that time, in motion court before Justice Samela.
35.
When the matter was called, Mr Wessels brought the all of the email
exchanges
between Adv. Shaw, Ms Veerapen and himself to the
Honourable Justice Samela’s attention, except for the email
sent at 10:01,
of which he was at that stage unaware. In his address
to the Court, Mr Wessels identified the nature of the applications
before
the Court and highlighted the submissions made by Mr Jonker in
the plaintiff’s practice note. He handed up the email
correspondence
between the parties, as well as Adv. Shaw’s
email of 20 October 2021 with the attached notice of set down.
36.
Having heard Mr Wessels, Justice Samela was prepared to grant default
judgment
against the Trust and to postpone the application for
default judgment against the sureties and the second upliftment
application
to 7 February 2021.
37.
The matter stood down thereafter to allow Mr Wessels to correct an
error in
the draft order. Upon his return to chambers, Mr Wessels
noticed the email sent by Adv. Shaw at 10:01. He replied to the email
at 12:04, advising Adv. Shaw that an order had been granted and
attaching the draft order. Upon his return to motion court, Mr
Wessels informed Justice Samela of Adv. Shaw’s email of 10:01
that morning. Despite this, Justice Samela declined to set aside
the
default judgment granted earlier.
38.
The Court thus granted the default judgment against the Trust with
full knowledge
of all of the circumstances and of the correspondence
between the parties in relation to the matter.
39.
It is clear from the correspondence that neither Adv. Shaw nor Mr
Bailey arranged
with the plaintiff’s representatives for the
matter to be heard virtually. Such a request was also not made by Mr
Shaw in
a practice note. Adv. Shaw was, a day before the hearing,
expressly made aware of the fact that Justice Samela would not hear
the
matter virtually, and that it was enrolled on the motion court
roll in open court. Adv. Shaw as a practising and, according to Mr
Bailey, experienced advocate, must further have known that Ms
Veerapen, as registrar, was not empowered to set down or remove
matters from any roll. It served no purpose directing the debate at
her. She had already indicated that the matters were not before
Justice Montzinger on the urgent roll. When and how Adv. Shaw formed
the impression that an “online roll” existed is
unclear.
40.
Mr Bailey’s founding affidavit in the rescission application
relies on
the same circumstances set out in the correspondence
referred to above. All of these circumstances were known to Justice
Samela
when he granted the default judgment against the Trust.
41.
There was accordingly no irregularity in the proceedings, and no
situation arose
in which the Court was unaware of facts which, if
known to it, would have precluded the grant of default judgment. The
Trust’s
application for the upliftment of the bar had been
dismissed in January 2021, and default judgment against the Trust
could properly
be obtained. The Court did not grant default judgment
against the sureties, but duly postponed the application for default
judgment
against them to be heard together with the second upliftment
application.
42.
In all of these circumstances, I have come to the conclusion that no
case has
been made out for rescission under
Rule 42(1)(a).
The
rescission application stands to be dismissed for one or both of the
following reasons:
42.1. The fact that the Trust is not
properly before the Court.
42.2. The failure to make out a case
under
Rule 42(1)(a)
for the default judgment against the Trust to be
rescinded.
The
reserve price and the constitutional argument
43.
At the hearing of the applications the
defendant’s counsel raised what was referred to as a
“constitutional element”.
This related to the reserve
price placed on the sale of the property in execution in the default
judgment granted by the Honourable
Justice Samela against the Trust.
The defendants argued that the reserve price was too low and thus
unconstitutional, infringing
their rights to housing and property.
Thus, they argued, the plaintiff’s action and “
the
law itself is in violation of the constitution in so far as it allows
this unconstitutional practice by the bank
”.
44.
This “constitutional”
argument had not previously been raised and was not seriously
pressed. As to the variation of
the reserve price, I decline to do
so. In fact, I cannot do so. I have already found that the default
judgment, which included
the setting of a reserve price in declaring
the immovable property specially executable, is not to be rescinded.
In any event,
the circumstances prescribed in
Rule 46A(c)
for the
reconsideration of the reserve price are not present, and information
in relation to the factors to be taken into account
as set out in
Rule 46A(b)
and (d) is not before me.
# Order
Order
#
45.
In the circumstances, it is ordered as
follows:
45.1.
The fourth and fifth defendants’
application to uplift the bar is dismissed, with costs on the scale
as between attorney and
client.
45.2.
Default
judgment is granted against the fourth and fifth defendants jointly
and severally with each other and with the first, second
and third
defendants, the one paying, the other to be absolved, fo
r:
45.2.1.
Condonation of the plaintiff’s
failure to annex to its particulars of claim true copies of the
mortgage loan agreements in
terms of
Rule 18(6).
45.2.2.
Payment of the amount of R3 551 823,79.
45.2.3.
Interest on R3 551 823, 79 at
the rate of 10,00% per annum, calculated on daily outstanding
balances and capitalised monthly
on the first day of each month from
7 January 2020 to date of payment, both dates inclusive.
45.2.4.
Costs of suit on the scale as between
attorney and client.
#
45.3.
The first to third defendants’
application for rescission of the default judgment granted against
them on 27 October 2021
is dismissed, with costs on the scale as
between attorney and client.
P.
S. VAN ZYL, AJ
HEARING
DATE:
7 February 2022
Appearances:
Counsel
for the plaintiff:
W. Jonker, instructed by Fourie Basson &
Veldtman
Counsel
for the defendants:
D. Shaw (trust account advocate, briefed
directly)
sino noindex
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