begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAWCHC 89
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Cloud 9 Skylights and Patio Systems CC and Others (1435/2014)
[2022] ZAWCHC 89 (25 May 2022)
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Cloud 9 Skylights and Patio Systems CC and Others (1435/2014)
[2022] ZAWCHC 89 (25 May 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2022_89.html
sino date 25 May 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
1435/2014
In
the matter between:
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Plaintiff
and
CLOUD
9 SKYLIGHTS AND PATIO
SYSTEMS
CC
First Defendant
IAN
ANDREW
LOWE
Second Defendant
PATRICK
O’RIORDAN
Third Defendant
MARION
O’RIORDAN
Fourth Defendant
Coram:
Rogers J
Heard
on:
18 May 2022
Delivered:
25 May 2022 (electronically at 09h30)
JUDGMENT
ROGERS
J:
Introduction
[1]
A seemingly straightforward
overdraft claim by a bank for just over R129,000 has been allowed,
over the last eight years, to sink
in a procedural bog. What is
before me is an application by the defendants to uplift a bar so that
they may plead to the particulars
of claim. But it took some time to
get here.
[2]
The first defendant, Cloud 9
Skylights and Patio Systems CC (Cloud), is sued as the principal
debtor. The second defendant Mr Ian
Andrew Lowe, the third defendant
Mr Patrick O’Riordan, and the fourth defendant Mrs Marion
O’Riordan, are sued as sureties.
I shall refer to the second to
fourth defendants collectively as the individual defendants.
Procedural
history
[3]
The plaintiff, Standard Bank of
South Africa Ltd, issued summons in January 2014. The particulars of
claim (particulars) alleged
that Cloud opened a current account in
August 2011 on the bank’s standard terms and conditions. Those
terms were attached
to the particulars. The plaintiff sought to hold
the individual defendants liable on the basis of a suretyship signed
in December
2004.
[4]
In March 2014 the defendants, acting
in person, gave notice of their intention to defend. The plaintiff
sought summary judgment,
which was opposed. In April 2014 the
defendants were given leave to defend. The plaintiff delivered a
notice of bar in June 2014,
to which the defendants (still in person)
responded by serving an “application” of exception and
striking-out.
[5]
In November 2019, more than five
years later, the plaintiff delivered a notice of intention to amend
its particulars. I was told
from the bar that some of the delay was
caused by the fact that Cloud was deregistered and that the plaintiff
had to bring an application
to restore Cloud to the register. The
defendants’ present attorneys, Van Eeden
Beirowski
Inc (VEB), represented Mr Lowe and Mr O’Riordan
during 2019 in opposing the restoration application. That application
was,
however, settled; the respondents withdrew their opposition, and
Cloud was restored to the register. Be that as it may, the proposed
amendment of November 2019 alleged that Cloud had concluded two
business account agreements with the plaintiff, one in May 2004,
the
other in August 2011. Details were now furnished of the persons who
represented the plaintiff and Cloud respectively. The documents
alleged to record the 2004 and 2011 agreements (the 2011 document
being a repeat of the one annexed to the original particulars)
were
attached. The plaintiff continued to rely on the same suretyship.
[6]
In December 2019 the individual
defendants, represented by VEB, filed an objection to the proposed
amendment. It is unclear why
VEB did not at that stage include Cloud
as a party to the objection; perhaps Cloud had not yet been restored
to the register.
[7]
The plaintiff did not give effect to
the proposed amendment. More than a year later, the plaintiff served
another notice of intention
to amend dated 26 January 2021. This
notice announced that the plaintiff was withdrawing the notice filed
in November 2019. The
new notice repeated the content of the previous
notice about the conclusion of the business account agreements in
2004 and 2011,
but then went on to allege that Cloud had operated two
current accounts. Additional allegations were made about interest and
breach.
A certificate of indebtedness in respect of the first
account, and the bank statements in respect of the second account,
were attached.
[8]
On 29 January 2021 the plaintiff’s
attorneys, De Klerk & Van Gend Inc (DKVG), served the notice of
amendment on VEB. In
their filing sheet, DKVG identified VEB as the
attorneys for the first, second and third defendants (that is, Cloud,
Mr Lowe and
Mr O’Riordan). The filing notice identified Mrs
O’Riordan as unrepresented care of an address which was
presumably
her home. DKVG instructed the deputy sheriff to serve the
notice of amendment on her, which the deputy sheriff did on 16
February
2021. These dates of service are important to the
defendants’ argument. They contend that the 10-day period for
the defendants
to object to the amendment in terms of rule 28(2) ran
from 29 January 2021, since VEB was acting for all the defendants.
[9]
As background to the
defendants’ contention, the following detail must be added.
According to the plaintiff, the respective
attorneys at DKVG and VEB
had a telephonic conversation in August 2019, during which the
plaintiff’s attorney asked whether
VEB’s mandate included
Mrs O’Riordan. The defendants’ attorney appeared to be
uncertain. It was for this reason
that DKVG regarded VEB as acting
only for the first three defendants, hence the way in which the
notice of amendment of January
2021 was served. According to the
defendants, by contrast, the conversation between the attorneys in
August 2019 took place in
the context of the restoration application.
The inquiry about Mrs O’Riordan did not make sense to the
defendants’ attorney,
because Mrs O’Riordan was not a
party to the restoration application.
[10]
If the 10-day period for objection
ran from 29 January 2021, it expired on 12 February 2021. If the
10-day period ran from 16 February
2021, it expired on 2 March 2021.
The defendants did not object to the amendment within either of these
periods. In terms of rule
28(5), where no objection to a proposed
amendment is made, the recipients of the notice are deemed to have
consented to the amendment,
and the party who gave the notice “may,
within 10 days after the expiration of the [period for objection],
effect the amendment
as contemplated in subrule (7)”, that is,
by delivering the amended pages of the pleading. Depending on when
the 10-day period
for objection in this case expired, the further
10-day period for the plaintiff to deliver the amended pages expired
on 26 February
2021 or 16 March 2021.
[11]
On 10 March 2021, the deputy sheriff
served the amended pages on Mrs O’Riordan. On 12 March
2021, DKVG served the amended
pages on the first to third defendants
care of VEB. The defendants contend that the 10-day period for the
plaintiff to serve the
amended pages expired on 26 February 2021.
Because the amended pages were served late, so the defendants
contend, the notice of
amendment served in January 2021 lapsed. If
the plaintiff wanted to proceed with that amendment, it had to give a
fresh notice
of amendment and comply with the time limits in rule 28.
[12]
The defendants did not, however,
promptly take this objection. Nothing was initially heard from the
defendants, and so on 15 April
2021 the plaintiff’s attorneys
drafted a rule 26 notice of bar. On 19 April 2021 the notice of bar
was served by the deputy
sheriff on Mrs O’Riordan, and on 22
April 2021 DKVG served the notice of bar on the first to third
defendants care of VEB.
If the notice of bar was good, the five-day
period for the defendants to plead would expire on 30 April 2021.
[13]
It was only in reaction to the
notice of bar that the defendants took issue with the late delivery
of the amended particulars. On
23 April 2021, VEB – who still
recorded themselves, as they had done in December 2019, as acting
only for the second to fourth
defendants – served a notice in
terms of rule 30A in which the defendants objected to the delivery of
the amended particulars,
as well as the service of the notice of bar,
as irregular steps. This was based on the contention that no valid
amendment to the
particulars had been effected. (If correct, this
would mean that the only currently valid particulars are the original
particulars
of January 2014, against which there would be the
still-pending exception and striking-out application of June 2014.)
[14]
On 30 April 2021, VEB emailed DKVG,
seeking a response to the rule 30A notice. DKVG’s reply was
that, because of the need
to serve Mrs O’Riordan separately,
the amended pages had been timeously delivered, and that the five-day
period for the defendants
to file a plea would expire that same day.
The defendants complain that DKVG’s response was only sent at
16h34, and they
impute bad faith to the plaintiff.
The
rule 27 application
[15]
On
1 June 2021, the defendants delivered the application which is now
before me. In the notice of motion, VEB still record themselves
as
acting only for the individual defendants. However, in the founding
affidavit, Mr Lowe states that the application is made by
all four
defendants. The notice of motion seeks condonation, in terms of rule
27, for the defendants’ failure to comply with
the time limits
contemplated in rule 22 (that is, the rules for filing a plea); that
the bar imposed on them by the plaintiff’s
notice of bar be
lifted; that the defendants be allowed to file pleas within 20 days
of the Court’s order; and that the plaintiff
pay the costs of
the application in the event of opposition. In his founding
affidavit, Mr Lowe repeats that the purpose of the
application is to
seek the foregoing relief. In regard to the requirement for good
cause, he sketches the procedural history, and
states that the
defendants’ failure to plead was not due to wilfulness and that
the plaintiff will not be prejudiced if the
defendants are allowed to
file a plea within 20 days, as the plaintiff itself has been dragging
its feet for seven years.
[1]
[16]
In regard to the requirement of a
bona fide defence, he states the following.
“
20.
I deny that I am liable as surety for the amounts owing by the
First Defendant to the Plaintiff because of the following
reasons:
20.1 The surety clause
contained in the contract does not comply with the requirements
envisaged in section 6 of the General Law
Amendment Act 50 of 1956 in
that the identity of the creditor, that of the principal debtor, that
of the surety, as well as the
nature and amount of the principal
debt, is not clearly defined in a separate written document.
20.2 Further to the
above, at the time of the conclusion of the credit agreement between
the Plaintiff and the First Defendant the
Plaintiff exceeded the
maximum credit limit it was authorised to extend to the Defendants.
20.3 Never did the
Plaintiff furnish the First Defendant or me with notice, or a
proposal, of a credit limit increase. Such increase
without my
consent constitutes reckless credit lending.”
[17]
In its opposing affidavit, the
plaintiff disputes that there was good cause for the defendants’
non-compliance or that they
have a bona fide defence.
The
defendants’ submissions
[18]
Although the heads of argument on
both sides addressed the application as presented, counsel for the
defendants began his oral submissions
by stating that he would argue
only one point, namely that the notice of bar was bad in view of the
fact that the amended particulars
had not been timeously delivered
and that there were thus no amended particulars to which the
defendants could be required to plead.
I pointed out to him that I
did not have before me a rule 30 application to set aside the notice
of bar as an irregular step; what
was before me was a rule 27
application which assumed the validity of the notice of bar and which
asked that the defendants’
non-compliance be condoned and the
bar be lifted so that they could file a plea. Counsel submitted that
I could nevertheless determine
the point he wished to argue in the
exercise of the Court’s inherent jurisdiction.
[19]
After making oral submissions on the
above point, counsel for the defendants – in a departure from
his opening position –
made brief submissions in the
alternative, in which he argued that the bar should be lifted. In
regard to the requirement of a
bona fide defence, the only oral
submission he made was that the deed of suretyship contained a
handwritten amendment to the name
of the principal debtor, and this
amendment had not been initialled. The deed of suretyship described
the principal debtor as follows
(the headings of the two boxes were
pre-printed, everything else handwritten):
Debtor’s
full name
ONLINE
SHELF 3 CC
Registration number, if applicable
CK [....]
Change
of name: CLOUD 9 SKYLIGHTS AND PATIO SYSTEMS CC
[20]
Counsel for the plaintiff submitted
that it was not open to the defendants to convert the present
application into a rule 30 application
directed at the filing of the
amended pages and notice of bar. Regarding the rule 27 application,
he submitted that there was neither
good cause nor a bona fide
defence.
The
defendants’ primary argument: irregularity and inherent
jurisdiction
[21]
I
do not consider that the Court should exercise its inherent
jurisdiction in order to decide the primary argument advanced by the
defendants at the hearing. Inherent jurisdiction is sparingly
exercised, and is generally intended to cater for procedural matters
not expressly regulated by the Uniform Rules of Court or to prevent
manifest injustice.
[2]
The
Uniform Rules expressly lay down the procedure to be followed by a
litigant who considers that the adversary has committed
an irregular
step. The defendants embarked on the first stage of that process when
they delivered a rule 30A notice on 23 April
2021. They should
actually have proceeded in terms of rule 30, not rule 30A, since they
were not seeking to compel the plaintiff
to comply with a requirement
of the rules but to impeach, as irregular, two steps which the
plaintiff had taken. Nevertheless,
they did give the plaintiff 10
days in which to remove the causes of complaint, as would have been
required by rule 30(2)(b).
[22]
Since the plaintiff did not remove
the causes of complaint within the 10-day period, that is by 10 May
2021, the defendants had
15 days in terms of rule 30(2)(c) in which
to bring an application to set aside the irregular steps. That 15-day
period expired
on 31 May 2021. The rules thus expressly regulate how
the point which counsel for the defendants wished to ventilate could
be placed
before a Court for decision. The defendants did not,
however, bring a rule 30 application. Instead, on 1 June 2021, the
day following
the expiry of the time for bringing a rule 30
application, the defendants delivered a rule 27 application. That
cannot have been
anything but a deliberate choice. The defendants
have not even belatedly delivered a rule 30 application. The issue
was only pursued
– informally, orally and without a request for
condonation – in argument on 18 May 2022, nearly a year after a
rule
30 application should have been served.
[23]
In
any event, I do not consider that a litigant’s failure to
deliver amended pages within the 10-day period specified in rule
28(5) has the guillotine effect for which the defendants’
counsel argued. I am willing to assume in the defendants’
favour, without so deciding, that service on VEB was service on all
the defendants, and that the plaintiff was under a misapprehension
in
believing that it needed to effect separate service on Mrs
O’Riordan.
[3]
Litigants
who have received a notice of amendment are deemed to have consented
to it if they do not object within the 10-day period
specified in
rule 28(2). This deemed consent operates immediately upon the expiry
of the 10-day period. Rule 28(5) states that
the litigant which gave
the notice “may” within 10 days effect the amendment. I
accept that this imposes on the litigant
an obligation to deliver the
amended pages within the 10-day period if it wishes to pursue the
amendment.
[24]
It
does not follow that amended pages delivered outside the 10-day
period are a nullity and that the amending party has to start
the
rule 28 process afresh. After all, the litigants receiving the
amended pages might have no objection to the lateness. If they
do,
they could proceed in terms of rule 30; and, in the face of such an
objection, the amending party would be entitled to seek
condonation
from the Court. In that regard, I agree with Goosen J’s
analysis of the position in
Becker
,
[4]
where the learned Judge concluded:
“
In
my view the failure by a litigant to act in accordance with its
intention to amend pleadings within the stipulated time period
does
not ipso facto preclude such party from thereafter filing its
amendment. All that may be said is that a litigant who conducts
himself in that manner exposes himself or herself to the possibility
that a party may object on the basis that such constitutes
an
irregular step. Where there is no such objection there can, in
principle, be no objection to the court dealing with the matter
on
the basis of the amended pleadings.”
[5]
[25]
In the present case, the plaintiff
served the amended particulars on all defendants by not later than 12
March 2021. If the defendants
objected to the lateness of the amended
particulars, they had 10 days in terms of rule 30(2)(b) to give a
notice to remove the
cause of complaint. That 10-day period expired
on 29 March 2021. They did nothing, however, until the notice of bar
was served
on them on 22 April 2021. By then, it was too late to
object to the late delivery of the amended particulars. Quite
plausibly,
the defendants did not previously object to the late
delivery of the amended particulars because there was no conceivable
prejudice
to them.
[26]
Although the rule 30A notice which
the defendants delivered on 23 April 2021 was directed at the
delivery of both the amended particulars
and the notice of bar, the
objection to the notice of bar depended for its validity on the
soundness of the objection to the delivery
of the amended
particulars. The objection to the delivery of the amended particulars
was significantly out of time. In the absence
of a substantive rule
30 application, including condonation for the defendants’
failure timeously to raise their objection
to the delivery of the
amended particulars, the plaintiff’s amended particulars were
and remain validly part of the pleadings.
Any irregularity in their
late delivery is irrelevant in the absence of a proper rule 30
application.
The
defendants’ alternative argument: rule 27
[27]
Turning
to the rule 27 application, the rule requires “good cause”
to be shown. The two main factors in assessing whether
good cause has
been shown are the explanation for the delay and whether the
delinquent party has a bona fide claim or defence.
[6]
Prejudice to the other party, if condonation were granted, is also a
relevant consideration. If I were satisfied that the defendants
had a
bona fide defence, I would probably exercise my discretion in favour
of condonation and lifting the bar, given the litigation
history.
While the defendants’ conduct, particularly between 12 March
2021-1 June 2021, leaves much to be desired, the plaintiff
itself did
not, before that time, display diligence in advancing the litigation.
However, the defendants have not come close to
showing that they have
a bona fide defence, and this leads to the ineluctable conclusion
that the rule 27 application is simply
a delaying tactic.
First
alleged defence
[28]
In
regard to the first defence, namely the attack on the validity of the
suretyship (a point which would not avail Cloud), the defendants,
in
their founding affidavit, failed to particularise the complaint, and
the heads of argument for the defendants (not drafted by
counsel) did
not elaborate. The creditor is specified as Standard Bank of South
Africa Ltd. The sureties are also clearly identified
by name and
identity numbers.
[7]
The
suretyship covers, up to the maximum amount of R250,000, “all
present and future debts of any kind” of the principal
debtor
to the plaintiff, and thus covers the alleged indebtedness on
overdraft to the plaintiff.
[29]
As
to the description of the principal debtor, section 6 of Act 50 of
1956 requires only that the terms of the contract of suretyship
should be in a written document signed by or on behalf of the surety.
Although it is customary for parties to initial handwritten
insertions in pre-printed contracts, initialling is not necessary in
order to achieve compliance with section 6, provided of course
that
the handwritten insertion, if it is a term of the contract, was on
the document when the surety signed it or was later inserted
with the
surety’s authority before the signed document was delivered to
the creditor.
[8]
[30]
Although
the defendants have not alleged, in their rule 27 application, that
the alteration of the principal debtor’s name
was made after
they signed the suretyship, they did make such an allegation in their
affidavit opposing summary judgment, and I
am willing to assume this
in their favour. One of the terms of a suretyship is the
identification of the person who is the principal
debtor. The
corporate existence of a close corporation does not, however, undergo
change when its name changes. The defendants
have not alleged that
Cloud does not have the registration number stated in the suretyship
or that its name was not previously
Online Shelf 3 CC. They do not
say that, when they signed the suretyship, the close corporation’s
name was not correctly
recorded as Online Shelf 3 CC, and there is
material in the record suggesting that in December 2004 this was
indeed the first defendant’s
name.
[9]
The fact that the corporation may later have changed its name does
not invalidate the suretyship. One can disregard what may have
been a
later internal “correction” which the bank noted on the
suretyship. If it were disputed, evidence would be admissible
to
prove that the first defendant is the close corporation previously
called Online Shelf 3 with the registration number stated
in the
deed.
[10]
Second
alleged defence
[31]
The second defence is that, at the
time of the conclusion of the banking agreement between the plaintiff
and Cloud, “the plaintiff
exceeded the maximum credit limit it
was authorised to extend to the defendants”. If the defendants
are referring to some
internal authority within the bank, it is not a
point they can take; only the plaintiff itself could complain if one
of its officials
committed the bank to a contract beyond his or her
authority. If the defendants are referring to some limit which they
themselves
placed on the overdraft which the plaintiff could grant
Cloud, they have given no details of the limit and when and how it
was
communicated to the plaintiff.
[32]
While
a bank is not obliged, in the absence of prior arrangement, to honour
payment instructions which would result in the account
being
overdrawn, or which would result in the overdraft exceeding an agreed
limit, a bank is entitled to treat such payment instructions
as a
request for further facilities, and the customer cannot then be heard
to say that it is not liable.
[11]
As for the sureties, the suretyship stated that their liability would
“not be affected by any renewal, change or withdrawal
of any
facilities, or indulgences, granted by the bank to the debtor”.
[33]
It
appears from documents in the pleadings file that in 2004 Mr Lowe was
the close corporation’s sole member,
[12]
and that by not later than November 2007 Mr Lowe and Mr O’Riordan
were Cloud’s sole members, holding member interests
of 70% and
30% respectively.
[13]
In the
2011 application to open a business account, Mr Lowe and Mr O’Riordan
were identified as the close corporation’s
members,
[14]
with either of them to have signing powers.
[15]
A complaint by them that the plaintiff should not have honoured
Cloud’s payment instructions is spurious.
Third
alleged defence
[34]
The final defence is that the
plaintiff did not notify Cloud or Mr Lowe of a credit limit increase,
that the increase was without
Mr Lowe’s consent, and that it
constituted reckless lending. As I have said, Cloud’s liability
for the overdrawn balance
on its account is not affected by whether
or not the plaintiff had pre-approved a particular credit limit. It
was Cloud’s
payment instructions which resulted in the account
being overdrawn.
[35]
As
to reckless lending, the defendants have provided no details. In any
event, the plaintiff has, in all three iterations of its
particulars,
alleged that the National Credit Act
[16]
is inapplicable, having regard to the fact that Cloud is a juristic
person and to the thresholds contemplated in section 4(1)(a)
of the
Act. The defendants have not addressed this at all.
Conclusion
[36]
It follows that the defendants’
application must be dismissed with costs. The application was
initially set down for hearing
on 24 January 2022. No judge was
allocated, apparently because of an absence of a practice note and
request for early allocation.
The plaintiff seeks the wasted costs of
24 January 2022, submitting that the costs were wasted because of the
defendants’
failure, as the applicants, to make sure that the
case was ready for allocation. The defendants contest this. It
matters not, because
if the defendants were not at fault, the wasted
costs should be costs in the cause (the cause for this purpose being
the rule 27
application).
Order
[37]
I make the following order:
1.
The defendants’ rule 27 application is dismissed.
2.
The defendants, jointly and severally, must pay the plaintiff’s
costs in the application,
including the wasted costs of 24 January
2022.
O
L ROGERS
Judge
of the High Court
For
the Plaintiff:
Z Haffjee instructed by De Klerk & Van Gend Inc.
For
the Defendants:
G Potgieter instructed
by Van Eeden
Beirowski
Inc (the heads of argument having been prepared by
Van Eeden
Beirowski
Inc).
[1]
In
para 19 of the founding affidavit, he formulates these statements
with reference to himself, but I assume that he intended
them to
apply to the other defendants as well.
[2]
Phillips
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2005] ZACC 15
;
2006 (1) SA 505
(CC) at para 48;
South
African Broadcasting Corporation Limited v National Director of
Public Prosecutions
[2006] ZACC 15
;
2007 (1) SA 523
(CC) at paras 86-90;
Oosthuizen
v Road Accident Fund
[2011] ZASCA 118
;
2011 (6) SA 31
(SCA) at paras 17-20;
Molaudzi
v
S
[2015] ZACC 20
;
2015 (2) SACR 341
(CC) at paras 33-4.
[3]
I
note, in passing, though, that there was no remonstration from VEB
in reaction to DKVG’s filing sheets identifying VEB
as the
attorneys for only the first to third defendants or in reaction to
service by the deputy sheriff on Mrs O’Riordan.
[4]
Becker
v MEC For The Department Of Economic Development & Environmental
Affairs
[2014] ZAECPEHC 43.
[5]
Id
at para 21. In the course of his judgment, Goosen J considered and
distinguished the authorities which the defendants’
counsel in
the present case cited, namely
Van
Heerden v Van Heerden
1977 (3) SA 455
(W) and
Fiat
SA (Pty) Ltd v Bill Troskie Motors
1985 (1) SA 355 (O).
[6]
In
the context of rule 27, see
Van
Aswegen v Kruger
1974
(3) SA 204
(O);
Benade
v Absa Bank Limited
[2014] ZAWCHC 84
at para 10;
Junkeeparsad
v Solomon
[2021] ZAGPJHC 48 at para 6. In
Ferris
v Firstrand Bank Limited
[2013] ZACC 46
;
2014 (3) SA 39
(CC), the Court said that the test
for condonation, ultimately, is the interests of justice, and that
the delinquent party’s
prospects of success in the main case
is a relevant factor (at para 10). See also
Turnbull-Jackson
v Hibiscus Court Municipality
[2014]
ZACC 24
;
2014 (6) SA 592
(CC) at para 23.
[7]
The
named sureties are Mr Lowe and Mr O’Riordan, the latter being
described as married in community of property. Mrs O’Riordan
is not named in, and did not sign, the suretyship, and is presumably
sued on the basis of the community marriage. No defence
in terms of
section 15(2)(h)
of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
has been
raised by the O’Riordans, which might be because Mrs O’Riordan
gave the written consent contemplated in
section 15(2)
or because
the suretyship was given by Mr O’Riordan in the ordinary
course of his profession, trade or business as contemplated
in
section 15(6).
The onus was on the
O’Riordans
to
allege and prove non-compliance with
section 15(2)(h)
read with
section 15(6):
Strydom
v Engen Petroleum Ltd
[2012] ZASCA 187
;
2013 (2) SA 187
(SCA) at paras 10-16.
[8]
See
Jurgens
v Volkskas Bank Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 152
;
1993
(1) SA 214
(A), dealing with the case where signature precedes the
insertions. This decision implicitly recognises that insertions do
not
need to be separately initialled..
[9]
The
material in the pleading file is somewhat confusing as to the first
defendant's correct name at any given time. The 2004 application
to
open a business account gave the close corporation’s name as
Cloud 9 Skylights & Patio Systems (record 186 and 189).
This is
also the name used in the 2011 application to open a business
account (record 202 and 212). Yet in September 2005, Mr
Lowe and Mr
O’Riordan signed a vehicle and asset finance suretyship giving
the close corporation’s name as Online
Shelf 3 CC (record at
25). Attached to the plaintiff’s original particulars of claim
(at record 22-4) is a report apparently
issued by the Companies and
Intellectual Property Registration Office (CIPRO) on 20 November
2007. The corporation’s current
name is there given as Cloud 9
Skylights and Patio Systems, but there is a note of a change of name
on 20 November 2007, beneath
which appears the name Online Shelf 3.
This may indicate that until November 2007 the close corporation’s
official name
was Online Shelf 3 CC. In the period 2004-2007 it
might have been trading as Cloud 9 Skylights & Patio Systems.
The registration
number of the close corporation on these and all
other relevant documents is the same: CK 2004/029530/23.
[10]
Sapirstein
v Anglo African Shipping Company SA Ltd
1978 (4) SA 1
(A) at 12B-E;
Republican
Press (Pty) Ltd
v
Martin Murray Associates CC
1996 (2) SA 246
(N) at 251D-G;
Industrial
Development Corporation of SA (Pty) Ltd v Silver
2003 (1) SA 365
(SCA) at paras 9-10. Cf
Van
Wyk v Rotccher’s Saw Mills (Pty) Ltd
1948
(1) SA 983
(A) at 990-1.
[11]
Trust
Bank of Africa Ltd v Wassenaar
1972
(3) SA 139
(D) at 142C-143F;
Absa
Bank Ltd v I W Blumberg and Wilkinson
[1997] ZASCA 15
;
1997
(3) SA 669
(A) at 675I-676E.
[12]
He
is described as “sole proprietor” in the 2004
application to open a business account – record 188.
[13]
See
CIPRO report, above note 9 above, at record 23.
[14]
Record
203.
[15]
Record
204.
[16]
34
of 2005.
sino noindex
make_database footer start