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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2022] ZAWCHC 90
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## Prince v MFC, A Division of Nedbank and Another (4170/2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 90 (5 May 2022)
Prince v MFC, A Division of Nedbank and Another (4170/2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 90 (5 May 2022)
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sino date 5 May 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 4170/2022
In
the matter between:
GARRETH
ANVER
PRINCE
Applicant
and
MFC,
A DIVISION OF
NEDBANK
First
respondent
M
A
SLINGERS
Second
respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 5 MAY 2022
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
This application came before the Court as an urgent matter set
down
for 22 April 2022.
2.
The applicant seeks a spoliation order
against the first respondent (“MFC”) directing it to
restore possession to the
applicant of a vehicle described as a 2013
Ford Ranger with engine number [....], and bearing registration
number [....].
3.
The applicant also asks that MFC be held in
contempt of court in the event that it refuses to restore possession
of the vehicle
to the applicant. Lastly, the applicant asks that, in
the event that MFC fails to restore possession of the vehicle to the
applicant,
the South African Police Service or the Sheriff of this
Court to be authorised to do what is necessary to restore such
possession.
4.
The current application is a sequel to two
earlier applications brought in relation to the vehicle: On 22 March
2022 under case
number 7718/2022 (the Honourable Justice Binns-Ward
presiding), the applicant obtained an order on an urgent and
effectively
ex parte
basis against Ms Slingers (the second respondent in the current
application) directing her to restore the applicant’s
possession
of the vehicle. MFC was cited as second respondent in that
application, but no relief was granted against it.
5.
Subsequently, on 31 March 2022 under case
number 8239/2022 and before the Honourable Justice Kusevitsky, the
applicant obtained
another order on an urgent basis, again against Ms
Slingers as first respondent, MFC as second respondent, and a
debt-collecting
firm styled Kitshoff and Associates as third
respondent, in which contempt relief sought against the first
respondent was dismissed,
and further spoliation relief sought
against MFC and the third respondent was postponed to the 3rd of
August 2022 to be heard on
the semi urgent roll.
6.
That relief was granted because it appeared
on that day, that is, 31 March 2022, that MFC was in fact in
possession of the vehicle
and not Ms Slingers. MCF wished to oppose
the spoliation order sought against it, but had received very short
notice of the application
and could not prepare opposing papers in
time for the hearing. In terms of the court order, MFC was to retain
possession of the
vehicle pending the determination of the postponed
application.
7.
The applicant, dissatisfied with having to
wait for the spoliation relief to be dealt with on 3 August 2022,
approached the Judge
President and obtained permission for the matter
to be set down on the urgent roll on 22 April 2022. It appears
therefore that
it is the second part of the order granted on 31 March
2022 that is currently before me. The issue is confused somewhat by
the
fact that the notice of motion and founding papers serving before
me (apart from bearing a new case number) contain prayers and
submissions in support of additional relief not sought under case
number 8239/2022. I debated this with counsel for MFC and with
the
applicant at the hearing of this application. Counsel for MFC was of
the view that the 31 March 2020 order stands, and that
therefore the
relief sought under case number 8239/2022 would still have to be
addressed on 3 August 2022 despite the institution
of the current
application.
8.
Despite the confusion, I tend to agree with
the applicant that what the Judge President allowed the applicant to
do in setting the
matter down on the urgent roll on 22 April 2022,
was to bring forward the argument that had been set down for hearing
on 3 August
2022. In other words, I am to determine the application
that was postponed to 3 August 2022. Upon the grant of an order in
the
present application (under case number 4170/2022) there would be
no need for the matter to be dealt with at any future stage and
the
order granted on 31 March 2022 in relation to the postponed relief
will effectively fall away.
9.
In the circumstances, I have to decide
whether a spoliation order is to be granted against MFC in relation
to its possession of
the vehicle. The new relief included in the
notice of motion relates to whether MFC should be held in contempt of
court should
they refuse to restore position of the vehicle to the
applicant. In the founding affidadvit and in argument the nature of
this
relief was changed in that the applicant submitted that MFC was
already in contempt of court as a result of its failure to return
the
vehicle to the applicant. I shall discuss the basis for this
submission below.
10.
When the matter served before me I had the
founding papers and an answering affidavit on file. The applicant
delivered, three days
after the hearing, a replying affidavit to my
chambers out of the blue. I do not know whether MFC has had sight of
this affidavit
and there is no application for condonation of the
late delivery threof. I have accordingly not taken the contents of
that affidavit
into account in determining this application.
Background
11.
The background to this matter is set out in the answering affidavit
delivered
by MFC.
12.
MFC concluded an instalment sale agreement
with Ms Slingers in respect of the vehicle some time ago. She made
the initial payment
and a few subsequent payments under the
agreement. On 15 June 2021, MFC notified Ms Slingers that her account
was in arrears. She
promised that payment would be made. This,
however, did not occur until 3 September 2021, at which time only a
small portion of
the arrears was paid.
13.
At the time, the whereabouts of Ms Slingers
and the vehicle were unknown. MFC then instructed a so-called
external debt collector
who traced Ms Slingers to her mother’s
home in Belhar. In conversation with Ms Slingers, the debt collector
learnt that Ms
Slingers had bought the vehicle for her cousin. Her
cousin had subsequently handed the vehicle to a third party,
presumedly the
applicant.
14.
MFC’s mandate to the external debt
collector to locate the vehicle expired, and a second external debt
collector, Kitshoff
and Associates, was appointed to try to find the
vehicle. On 4 January 2022, the second debt collector made contact
with Ms Slingers
and with the applicant. They were, on MFC’s
version, not co-operative (this is denied by the applicant, but does
not take
matters much further).
15.
On 11 March 2022 a third external debt
collector was mandated to attend to the collection of the vehicle.
This debt collector made
contact with Ms Slingers who advised that
the vehicle was in the possession of the applicant. The debt
collector then contacted
the applicant to enquire about the
whereabouts of the vehicle. According to the debt collector the
applicant informed him that
the vehicle was not in his, that is, the
applicant’s, possession at the time. The applicant denies that
he stated this but,
as it is common cause that MFC came into
possession of the vehicle from the police impound as set out below,
nothing turns on what
the applicant had or had not said to the debt
collector.
16.
On 18 March 2022 a certain Mr Denver (who
is unknown to MFC) contacted the third external debt collector and
advised that he had
spotted the vehicle at the Bellville South
African National Police impound. How the vehicle came to be impounded
is not clear on
the papers. MFC does not know, and the applicant
speculates that Ms Slingers herself took it there to get rid of it.
It might have
been stolen and retrieved by the police. Ms Slingers
has not opposed any of the applications brought by the applicant, and
her
version is therefore not before the Court.
17.
The police impound required proof from MFC
that it was the title holder to the vehicle. Upon receipt of this
information the external
debt collector made contact with Ms Slingers
to sign a voluntary surrender agreement in relation to the vehicle.
She signed the
voluntary surrender agreement on 25 March 2022.
18.
The vehicle was thereafter released to the
third external debt collector who in turn handed it over to MFC. It
is currently stored
in MFC’s storage unit.
19.
On 30 March 2022, MFC was notified by the
second external debt collector that the applicant was about to bring
an urgent application
under case number 8239/2022 on 31 March 2022
against MFC and Ms Slingers. MFC states that it was only on that day
that it became
aware of the spoliation proceedings previously
insituted and the spoliation order granted against Ms Slingers under
case number
7718/2022 on 22 March 2022. That was because that order
was attached to the urgent application to be heard on 31 March 2022.
Whether
MFC was aware of the order earlier as the applicant contends
will be dealt with below.
20.
MFC briefed counsel to attend the hearing
on 31 March 2022. That hearing resulted in the order by Justice
Kusevitsky to which I
have referred earlier. Notably, notwithstanding
the fact that the court on that day had sight of the spoliation order
granted against
Ms Slingers on 22 March 2022, it ordered that the
vehicle should remain in the possession of MFC, who undertook to
retain it and
not to dispose of it pending the finalisation of the
application.
Should
MFC be ordered to return the vehicle to the applicant?
21.
As mentioned earlier, MFC avers that it was
not aware of the spoliation order granted on 22 March 2022 when it
took possession of
the vehicle. It only became aware of that order on
30 March 2022, when it was informed of the urgent application to be
heard the
next day before the Honourable Justice Kusevitsky. It
therefore in good faith advised the court on 31 March 2022 of its
lawful
possession of the vehicle due to the voluntary surrender
agreement provided by Ms Slingers.
22.
MFC submits that it is not currently in
unlawful possession of the vehicle for the following reasons:
22.1
The order granted on 31 March 2022 under
case number 8239/2022 specifically states that MFC must remain in
possession of the vehicle
pending the finalisation of the
application.
22.2
MFC did not spoliate the applicant as it
was not aware of the spoliation order granted on 22 March 2022 under
case number 7718/2022
when it took possession of the vehicle from the
police impound.
22.3
The applicant has not met the requirements
for a case of spoliation against MFC, because the latter did not
deprive the applicant
of possession of the vehicle forcibly or
wrongfully against his will or without his consent.
23.
The applicant argues that MFC is a
co-spoliator because it knew of the order granted against Ms Slingers
on 22 March 2022, and yet
proceeded to take possession of the vehicle
after she had signed the voluntary surrender agreement and in the
face of the 22 March
2022 order. The applicant argues that he had
given notice of the order to MFC.
24.
As regards notice of the spoliation order
granted on 22 March 2022, and whether MFC was aware of that order,
there are a few significant
points to have regard to.
25.
The first is that the order did not apply
to MFC. It applied to Ms Slingers. No relief had been granted against
MFC. The order was
drafted in such a way that the heading thereto
reflects the following: It names the applicant and states in relation
to the “
Respondent
”
(in the singular) “
M A Slingers +
two others
”. MFC’s name
does not appear anywhere in or on the order as granted.
26.
The applicant says that he emailed a copy
of the order to the email address indicated on MFC's website, namely
care@mfc.co.za. He
did that on 23 March 2022. From the record it is
clear that he did not addess any message to MFC in the email, but
simply attached
photographs of the order. The subject line reads:
“
Photo from Ganja Prince
”.
No details as to the attachment are provided, and there is no
explanation as to the purpose and import of the email. What
MFC
received, therefore, was a photograph of a document that did not bear
its name. No context or explanation was provided at all.
27.
The applicant attaches to his founding
affidavit an email response from MFC’s multimedia contact
centre, which reads as follows:
“
Dear
Gareth Prince
Thank you for your
email.
Please advise how MFC
can assist you by replying to this email or calling us on 086 087
9900 with more details.
To get a settlement
amount, SMS the letter ‘S’ and your identity number to
31795 or email the letter ‘S’
and your identity number to
selfservice@mfc.co.za.
If you have any
questions, send an email to care@mfc.co.za or a fax to 0860 035 466.
NB: Did you know you
can now manage your account online? Simply register register on
www.mfc.co.za and get settlements, border letters
and statements.
Kind regards
..etc.
”
28.
It is clear that this is an automatic response generated to advise
persons wishing
to communicate with MFC as regards the channels
available to do so. The applicant did not pursue any of those
channels with details
of what he was communicating, why he was doing
so, and to whom. The response email is not proof, as the applicant
submits, that
any person within MFC responsible for the
administration of credit agreements such as the one concluded by Ms
Slingers obtained
notice of the order. This is especially so as the
order does not indicate that MFC was cited as a party. Insofar as
there is a
dispute on the papers as regards this issue, I must accept
MFC’s version (
Plascon Evans Paints (Tvl) Ltd v Van Riebeeck
Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C).
29.
The fact that Ms Slingers signed the voluntary surrender agreement on
25 March
2022 possibly in breach of the 22 March 2022 order does not
lead to the conclusion that, for that reason, MFC knew about the
order.
There is no indication that Ms Slingers informed MFC of the
order. It is, in fact, not clear from the papers whether Ms Slingers
herself was aware of the 22 March 2022 order by the time she signed
the voluntary surrender agreement. The applicant attaches to
his
founding affidavit photographs of the order having been sent to Ms
Slingers via WhatsApp but I cannot see from the papers filed
of
record whether the messages had in fact been read.
30.
The applicant relies, for his argument that MFC is a “co-spoliator”,
on the case of
Jamieson and another v Loderf and another (Pty) Ltd
and Others
(A595/2011)
[2015] ZAWCHC 18
(20 February 2015) in
which the following was stated by a Full Bench of this Court, having
discussed the various approaches to
whether a spoliation order can be
granted against a third party (like MFC) who has taken possession of
the relevant property from
the spoliator (Ms Slingers):
“
[51]
It is unnecessary to determine which of the varying approaches is
correct. Although some cases in the
Jivan
line
make reference to the
bona
fides
of the spoliator,
the
emphasis on my reading falls on the third party’s knowledge. If
the third party had notice of the spoliation when taking
possession,
there is much to be said for the view that spoliation relief should
be granted, not because the third party is a spoliator
but because he
had notice of the spoliation when taking possession
.
This outcome could well be justified on the basis of the doctrine of
notice, an equitable doctrine which in a living system
of law
can in appropriate circumstances be extended to situations not
already clearly covered by it, having regard to considerations
of
fairness and legal policy
.”
(Emphasis added.)
31.
The
Jivan
line referred to in the quote are cases in respect
of which the Court in
Jamieson
remarked in para [47]:
“
The
position here is that the sales and transfers occurred after the
institution of the spoliation application. There are cases
dealing
with the situation where the spoliator parted with possession before
institution of the spoliation application. There is
a line of
authority holding that in such circumstances the remedy of spoliation
is
not
available where possession has passed in good faith to an innocent
third party ..
.
I shall refer to this as the Jivan line.”
32.
In the present matter, MFC took possession of the vehicle after the
institution
of spoliation proceedings.
Jamieson
states the
following in this regard:
“
[54] Mr
Studti submitted that the
Jivan
line was
distinguishable because those cases dealt with transfers of
possession which occurred prior to the institution of the spoliation
proceedings,
whereas in the present case the transfers of
possession occurred while an appeal was pending. I do not think this
makes a difference
in principle. The reasoning in the cases was based
on the essential nature of a spoliation order, namely the restoration
of possession.
The spoliator ordinarily cannot restore possession if
he does not have it. This reasoning applies whether the transfer of
possession
occurred before or after the institution of the spoliation
proceedings. The fact that the transfer of possession occurred after
the institution of spoliation proceedings may be relevant in
assessing whether or not the third party acquired possession
innocently
but is not decisive
.” (Emphasis added.)
33.
In
Jamieson
the Court concluded on the facts before it that
the third parties in question could not be ordered to return the
property: “
[52] Be that as it may, it is common cause
in the present case that
the new owners did not know of the
spoliation or of the pending proceedings when they purchased or when
they took transfer. On the
Jivan
line,
therefore, no spoliation order is now possible
.
”
(Emphasis added.)
34.
On the papers at my disposal, I am not able to find that MFC had had
notice
of the spoliation order granted against Ms Slingers on 22
March 2022 when it took possession of the vehicle on 25 March 2022,
or
of the proceedings instituted to obtain such order. It only
acquired such notice on 30 March 2022. On the authority of
Jamieson
,
therefore, an order cannot be granted against MFC for the return of
the vehicle to the applicant.
35.
MFC, moreover, took possession of the vehicle not from Ms Slingers
(albeit that
she had formally surrendered the vehicle by signing the
surrender agreement) because she did not have it in her possession or
under
her control at the time. It had been used by the applicant
prior to it being impounded (for reasons unknown) and MFC obtained
possession
from the police via the external debt collector who
collected it from the impound.
36.
In these circumstances, there is no basis for an order directing MFC
to return
the vehicle to the applicant, whether (with reference to
the distinction made in
Jamieson
) as “co-spoliator”
or as third party with notice of the previously instituted spoliation
proceedings or subsequent
order.
Is
MFC in contempt of court?
37.
It follows from the finding that MFC had no knowledge of the order
granted on
22 March 2022 when it took possession of the vehicle from
the police impound (via the external debt collector) that it cannot
be
held in contempt of court for refusing to hand the vehicle the
applicant.
38.
The
common law test for whether disobedience of a civil order constitutes
contempt is that an order must exist, the order must have
been duly
served on the contemnor, there must have been non-compliance, and the
non-compliance must have been deliberate and
mala
fide
.
The onus lies on the applicant to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that all these elements are present (see
Fakie
N.O. v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4) SA 326
(SCA)).
39.
On the facts of this matter as they appear from the affidavits filed
of record,
there is not proof beyond a reasonable doubt that MFC had
notice of the order granted against Ms Slingers. It did not act in
defiance
– deliberately and in bad faith - of the order when it
took possession of the vehicle. As from 31 March 2022 it has been in
possession of the vehicle in terms of the order granted by Justice
Kusevitsky. It is not in contempt of the 22 March 2022 order.
Costs
40.
MFC is the successful party in the
litigation and I can see no reason for deviating from the general
principle that costs follow
the result.
41.
MFC sought costs on an attorney and client
scale but I am not inclined to grant a punitive order. Punitive costs
orders should generally
be reserved for litigants who are guilty of
dishonesty or fraud or some other conduct which is to be frowned upon
by the Court:
“
The
scale of attorney and client is an extra-ordinary one which should be
reserved for cases where it can be found that a litigant
conducted
itself in a clear and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible
conduct. Such an award is exceptional and is intended to
be very
punitive and indicative of extreme opprobrium
”
(
Plastic
Converters Association of South Africa (PCASA) Obo Members v National
Union of Metalworkers Union of South Africa and Others
(JA112/14)
[2016] ZALAC 37
(6 July 2016) at para [46])
.
42.
The applicant was misguided in persisting
with seeking the relief he did against MFC, but I do not think that
his conduct was such
as to warrant costs on a punitive scale.
Order
43.
In all of these circumstances, I make the
following order:
The
application is dismissed, with costs on the scale as between party
and party, including any costs
that stood over from 31 March 2022
.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
HEARING
DATE: 22 April 2022
Appearances
:
The
applicant
:
In Person
For the first
respondent
:
C. Francis,
instructed by STBB Smith Tabata Buchanan Boyes
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