Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 169South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Tchibamba and Another (5642/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 169; 2022 (6) SA 571 (WCC) (2 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
2 September 2022
Headnotes
by the sheriff pending the determination of the current proceedings.
Judgment
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Tchibamba and Another (5642/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 169; 2022 (6) SA 571 (WCC) (2 September 2022)
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Tchibamba and Another (5642/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 169; 2022 (6) SA 571 (WCC) (2 September 2022)
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sino date 2 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No. 5642/2018
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Date
of hearing: 1 and 23 August 2022
Date
of judgment: 2 September 2022
In
the matter between:
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Plaintiff
and
VIANA
NTUMBA
TCHIBAMBA
First Defendant
VIRGINE
NTUMBA
MBUYI
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
J
[1]
This matter
concerns the reconsideration of a reserve price fixed in the order
made in an application brought in terms of Rule 46A
for leave to
execute against the defendants’ property that is their primary
residence. It has raised the problematic question
of the practical
working of Rule 46A(9). Rule 46A was inserted into the Uniform Rules
by GNR 1272 dated 17 November 2017.
[1]
It came into operation on 22 December 2017.
[2]
On 1 June
2018, this court (per Slingers AJ) granted judgment by default
against the defendants (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
judgment debtors’), jointly and severally, in the sum of R955
411,72, together with interest thereon at 8,86% per annum from
21
December 2017. The plaintiff’s claim was in respect of the
outstanding amount due in respect of a mortgage loan contract
upon
which the plaintiff bank foreclosed when the judgment debtors had
fallen significantly into arrears with their monthly payments.
Notwithstanding the terms of the mortgage contract, the learned
acting judge refused to order the mortgaged property directly
executable and required the plaintiff first to try to execute the
judgment against the defendants’ movable assets. (This was
before the delivery of the full court’s judgment in
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited v Hendricks and Another and various
other matters
[2018] ZAWCHC 175
(14 December 2018);
[2019] 1 All SA 839
(WCC);
2019
(2) SA 620
(WCC), which counselled against that approach.
[2]
)
The Sheriff was subsequently able to attach moveable assets with an
estimated value of only R51 600, which was a sum insufficient
even to
cover half of the amount in which the judgment debtors were then in
arrears on the mortgage loan account.
[3]
The matter therefore had to be reenlisted in the unopposed motion
court
for the hearing of a standalone application in terms of rule
46A. That application came before Sievers AJ on 20 August 2019. He
granted an order declaring the mortgaged property executable to
satisfy the judgment debt.
[4]
Rule
46A(8)(e) empowers a court granting such an order to determine a
reserve price for the sale in execution. In
Hendricks
supra,
[3]
the full court
expressed the view that only in ‘exceptional circumstances’
should a court seized of an application
under the rule not exercise
its discretion to set a reserve price. Rule 46A(9)(b) provides in
that connection:
In deciding whether to
set a reserve price and the amount at which the reserve is to be set,
the court shall take into account—
(i)
the market value of the immovable property;
(ii)
the amounts owing as rates or levies;
(iii)
the amounts owing on registered mortgage bonds;
(iv)
any equity which may be realised between the reserve price and the
market value of the property;
(v)
reduction of the judgment debtor’s indebtedness on the judgment
debt and as contemplated in subrule
(5)(a) to (e), whether or not
equity may be found in the immovable property, as referred to in
subparagraph (iv);
(vi)
whether the immovable property is occupied, the persons occupying the
property and the circumstances of such
occupation;
(vii) the
likelihood of the reserve price not being realised and the likelihood
of the immovable property not being
sold;
(viii) any
prejudice which any party may suffer if the reserve price is not
achieved; and
(ix)
any other factor which in the opinion of the court is necessary for
the protection of the interests of the
execution creditor and the
judgment debtor.
[5]
In this case, notwithstanding that I have yet to come across a sale
of
immovable property in real life that turned on a matter of cents,
a reserve price of R973 032,05 was fixed by the court. The judgment
debtors were ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs in the rule
46A application on the scale as between attorney and client.
[6]
A writ of attachment in respect of the mortgaged property was issued
by
the registrar on 9 October 2019, but the sale in execution took
place only on 7 December 2021. The reasons for the delay were
reportedly
the dislocating effects of the Covid-19 related lockdown
and the engagement of the plaintiff (to which I shall hereafter refer
as ‘the judgment creditor’) in ‘numerous attempts’
to make alternative payment arrangements with the defendants.
The
defendants reportedly failed to comply with their obligations under
the arrangements that were made.
[7]
There were
three bidders at the sale in execution conducted at the office of the
Sheriff for the Goodwood 1 district. The property
was knocked down to
the highest bidder for R700 000. The successful bidder was aware of
the reserve price,
[4]
but
reportedly refused to increase the bid to match it because he
considered the property to be in poor condition and was concerned
that in order to for his principal to obtain vacant occupation of the
property a costly eviction process would be required to evict
the
foreign nationals living there. It is common ground that the judgment
debtors are foreign nationals holding refugee status
in South Africa.
The judgment debtors have testified in the current proceedings that
part of the property is let to tenants who
are themselves in arrears
with their rentals. The nationality of the tenants has not been
disclosed.
[8]
The conditions of sale contained the following provision (in clause
2.2):
‘
If the sale is
subject to a reserve price then should the highest bid be less than
the reserve price, the highest bid will be provisionally
accepted
subject to the purchaser complying with clauses 3.1, 4.1 and 5.1; and
confirmation by the court.’
The
clauses mentioned committed the highest bidder to (i) signing the
conditions of sale as soon as possible after the sale and
immediately
upon request by the Sheriff, (ii) the immediate payment to the
Sheriff of a deposit equating to 10% of the selling
price and (iii)
payment on demand of the Sheriff’s commission. It appears from
the Sheriff’s return, a copy of which
was sent by email to the
judgment creditor on 14 December 2021, that the successful bidder had
before that date paid the sum of
R94 150,00 in compliance with the
conditions of the sale in execution. The money is being held by the
sheriff pending the determination
of the current proceedings.
[9]
Rule 46A(9)(d) provides:
Where the reserve price
is not achieved at a sale in execution, the sheriff must submit a
report to the court, within 5 days of
the date of the auction, which
report shall contain—
(i)
the date, time and place at which the auction sale was conducted;
(ii)
the names, identity numbers and contact details of the persons who
participated in the auction;
(iii)
the highest bid or offer made; and
(iv)
Any (
sic
) other relevant factor which may assist the court in
performing its function in paragraph (c).
The
stipulation of a 5-day time limit for the submission of the report
suggests an appreciation by the rule maker that an element
of urgency
is involved so that the required reconsideration by the court can be
done expeditiously.
[5]
[10]
Paragraph (c) referred to in Rule 46A(9)(d) provides:
If the reserve price is
not achieved at a sale in execution, the court
must
, on a
reconsideration of the factors in paragraph (b) and its powers under
this rule, order how execution is to proceed. (Underlining
for
emphasis.)
Rule
46A(9)(e) then provides (in evident amplification of Rule 46A(9)(c)
quoted above)):
The
court may, after considering the factors in paragraph (d) and any
other relevant factor, order that the property be sold to
the person
who made the highest offer or bid.
[11]
Van
Loggerenburg,
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice
Vol 2 (Juta) observes ‘[p]
aragraphs
(c), (d) and (e) of subrule (9) are not clearly worded
’.
[6]
I regret to say that I have to agree. It is not so much that the
individual paragraphs do not read clearly enough when each is
considered on its own; it is that, read together, they fail,
conspicuously, to provide any procedural framework in terms of which
the mandatory reconsideration prescribed in paragraph (c) is to
happen. As the current matter and others to which I shall refer
illustrate, such a framework is plainly required.
[12]
The
shortcoming in the subrule was recognised in
Changing
Tides 17 (Proprietary) Limited N.O. v Kubheka; Changing Tides 17
(Proprietary) Limited N.O. v Mowasa; Changing Tides 17
(Proprietary)
Limited N.O. v Bucktwar; Changing Tides 17 (Proprietary) Limited N.O.
v Horsley
[2022] ZAGPJHC 59 (15 February 2022), in which Fisher J, sitting in
the Gauteng Division (Johannesburg), in four ‘applications’
by a judgment creditor that were placed before her in chambers,
sought to remedy the situation by providing some procedural
guidelines
to be followed in such cases in that jurisdiction. The
learned judge recorded that in her own experience practitioners dealt
with
the means of obtaining the prescribed reconsideration of a
reserve price under rule 46A(9)(c) in a variety of ways that showed
up an undesirable lack of uniformity.
[7]
[13]
Prior to the introduction of the Uniform Rules, almost 60 years ago,
the divisions of the
then Supreme Court operated in accordance with
their own discrete rules of court. The object of the Uniform Rules,
as their title
suggests, is to promote a desirable degree of
uniformity in the practices and procedures of the various divisions
and local divisions
of the High Court nationally. The gaps in rule
46A mean, however, that the courts are unavoidably thrown back on
their own devices
to fill them. The inevitable result is the current
lack of predictability and, going forward, a likely lack of
uniformity. That
is far from ideal. Clearly, the situation should
enjoy the early attention of the Rules Board.
[14]
In the current matter, the Sheriff duly compiled a report in
compliance with paragraph
(d) of rule 46A(9). It appears to have been
produced on the same day as the sale in execution took place. I
assume that he lodged
it with the registrar and provided a copy to
the judgment creditor. The precise position in that regard is not
clear on the papers.
The report was placed before me about nine
months later as an annexure to each of the supporting affidavits in
the two court applications
that followed. I shall describe those
applications and their unhappy histories presently.
[15]
The
Sheriff’s report contained the following additional
information, no doubt included by virtue of sub-para (iv) of rule
46A(9)(d): ‘
The
property is further in a poor condition on the inside and will
require substantial renovation/work
’.
It seems to me that the content of the report falls within the ambit
of
s 43(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, which provides”
‘
The
return of the sheriff or a deputy sheriff of what has been done upon
any process of a court,
(sic
)
shall be prima facie evidence of the matters therein stated
’.
[8]
Accordingly, in the absence of cogent evidence to contradict what the
Sheriff has reported, I must accept for present purposes
that the
state of the property is as he has described.
[16]
It is evident that once the Sheriff had made his report, confusion
reigned as to how to
bring about the reconsideration required by
paragraph (c). It is necessary to chronicle the events, as they were
set out in the
affidavit of the judgment creditor’s attorney,
in some detail to illustrate just how grave and deserving of remedial
attention
the practical consequences of the shortcomings in subrule
(9) can be. To remark that in the current case they exposed a gaping
chasm between the evident objectives of the subrule and their
effective achievement would be an understatement.
[17]
After the Sheriff had produced his report the judgment creditor
brought an application
in February 2022 seeking the same relief that
the Sheriff does in the current application. Attempts were made to
get the application
heard as a matter of urgency on 14 February 2022,
but in the circumstances described in a letter by the judgment
creditor’s
attorney to the Judge President quoted below, the
registrar allocated 17 August 2022 as the date on which the matter
might be enrolled
on the ordinary unopposed motion court roll.
[18]
Concerned about the obviously prejudicial implications of the delay
between February and
August, the judgment creditor’s attorneys
addressed a letter, dated 4 March 2022, to the Judge President
seeking directions
as to the manner in which matters arising for
reconsideration in terms of
rule 46A(9)(c)
should be dealt with. In
its most pertinent part, the letter went as follows:
‘
This matter was
initially placed on the urgent court roll for 14 February 2022, after
the service of the application via e-mail
on the execution debtors as
well as on the purchaser. The honourable Judge Slingers was on duty
in the urgent roll on the said
date and Judge Papier was on duty in
Third Division. Judge Slingers suggested to our counsel that the
matter should be referred
to Judge Papier in Third Division. Judge
Papier refused permission to enrol the matter in Third Division and
advised our counsel
that applicant should apply for the allocation of
a date for the hearing on the prescribed form. A copy of the
prescribed form
is also annexed to this letter. We specifically
indicated that it was an interlocutory application in terms of
rule
46A(9)(c).
As would appear from annexed application for the
allocation of a trial date, the registrar allocated a date 6 months
in advance,
namely 17 August 2022 for the hearing of the application.
Apart from the reasons
for urgency as set out in the founding affidavit of the interlocutory
application (see ...) these applications
are, in our opinion, always
of an urgent nature, due to the following considerations:
1.
The highest bidder at the auction in the attached matter ... paid a
10% deposit
amounting to R70 000.00 as well as the Sheriff's
commission amounting to R24 150.00 (a total of R94 150.00) to the
Sheriff as long
ago as 7 December 2021;
2.
In many matters where properties are eventually sold in execution by
the Sheriff
after all attempts by the Bank to enter into a payment
arrangement with the judgment debtor [have] failed, it often happens
that
the properties are vacated on the day of the sale in execution
and are therefore subject to being vandalised or being occupied by
illegal occupants;
3.
In many cases, the properties are also left uninsured, which will
expose the
bondholder to the total loss of their security in the
event of the property burning down or being vandalised.
There currently seems to
be a total lack of uniformity as to how these applications for the
reconsideration of the reserve price
together with the Sheriff's
report should be “placed before a Judge”.
We are of the opinion
that it is not a reasonable outcome to expect the highest bidder to
wait a period of nine months before he
will know whether his
provisional offer will be accepted or not, whilst his deposit and
commission amounting to more than R94 000.00
is lying on the trust
account of the Sheriff. Applicant [ie the judgment creditor] is also
being prejudiced as no instalments are
being paid pending the outcome
of the application for the reconsideration of the reserve price and
applicant’s security is
being eroded every month an instalment
is not paid.
On behalf of applicant,
we respectfully request Your Lordship to issue guidelines so that
everyone in this Division can be on the
same page as to how these
interlocutory applications should be enrolled.’
[19]
The forementioned letter was taken, together with the court file, to
the Judge President’s
registrar. On 18 March 2022, the judgment
creditor’s attorney received a letter in response from the
Judge President’s
registrar in the following terms:
‘
I refer to your
letter dated 4 March 2022 and wish to inform you that the Judge
President directed that this matter can be heard
in open court before
a Judge as soon as possible.
Trust the above is in
order.’
[20]
The reply did not assist the judgment creditor’s attorneys in
determining how the
matter might be brought be before a judge in open
court expeditiously. They therefore sought clarity in this connection
and received
the following advice in a further letter from the Judge
President’s registrar, dated 24 March 2022:
‘
The Judge
President did not direct that this matter should go on the 3
rd
division roll. Please consult with Zane Booysen [a clerk in the Chief
Registrar’s office]. He will be able to assist as I
sent this
file to him.’
(The
‘Third Division’ is the expression used in the Western
Cape Division of the High Court to refer to the court reserved
for
the hearing of unopposed applications and divorces.)
[21]
A candidate attorney in the employ of the judgment creditor’s
attorneys was thereupon
instructed to advance the matter in
accordance with the advice received from the Judge President’s
registrar. It seems that
his instructions must have been to seek a
date for the hearing of the matter sometime in April. He was
directed, presumably by
Mr Booysen - although whether that was so is
not spelled out in the papers - to the Third Division registrar. The
latter sent him
on to another clerk in the Chief Registrar’s
office, one Unati, because the earliest opening for a hearing that
the Third
Division registrar could offer at that stage was in
November 2022. According to the judgment creditor’s attorney’s
affidavit, Unati indicated that if a hearing were required in April
2022, the matter would have to be referred to the Chief Registrar,
Ms
David.
[22]
The attorney testified that the file was taken to Ms David’s
office on 30 March 2022,
whereafter attempts were made at the office
of the Chief Registrar to speak to Ms David about the matter on six
separate dates
between 8 and 28 April 2022. An interview with Ms
David was obtained only on 3 May 2022. The candidate attorney was
then informed
that Ms David had discussed the matter with the Judge
President and that she had been instructed that use should be made of
Rule 46A(9)(d)
and that an application should be brought by the
Sheriff, not the judgment creditor.
(Rule 46A(9)(d)
contains nothing
about an application by the Sheriff.) The Chief Registrar advised
that once an application had been brought by
the Sheriff, she would
allocate a court date.
[23]
On 11 May 2022, the judgment creditor’s attorney again
approached the Judge President’s
registrar by email to seek
clarity concerning the information given by the Chief Registrar
because he was unable to understand
why the Sheriff, rather than the
judgment creditor, should bring the application. As I shall explain,
below, it is clear that in
this regard the attorney was of the same
mind as the learned judge in
Changing Tides
supra. The Judge
President’s registrar responded that she was unable to be of
further assistance.
[24]
The attorney then sought clarity from the Chief Registrar in an email
dated 17 May 2022,
as follows:
‘
We refer to the
aforesaid matter where the property was sold on 7th December 2021
below the reserve price.
The Sheriff submitted his
report in terms of
Rule 46A(9)(d)
which was annexed to our
interlocutory application in terms of
Rule 46A(9)(c)
& (e). We
attempted to set the matter down for hearing on 14
th
February 2022. The matter was not heard due to uncertainty on which
court roll it should be enrolled. After months of trying to
obtain
answers from the High Court, Mrs David confirmed to our candidate
attorney ... that she liaised with the Judge President
and that the
Sheriff (not the [judgment creditor’s] attorney) should bring
the application.
We are confused as the
Sheriff, in terms of 46A(9)(d), should only file a report. However,
this is not what Mrs David instructed.
Accordingly let us have
clarity regarding the identity of the person who needs to bring this
application.’
[25]
The judgment creditor’s attorney informed the Sheriff about the
instructions reportedly
received by the Chief Registrar. He testified
that the Sheriff was ‘just as confused’ as he was, but it
was decided
by both of them that the Sheriff should bring the
application supported by an affidavit by the judgment creditor’s
attorney
on behalf of both the judgment creditor and the purchaser in
terms of the sale in execution in order ‘
to move this matter
forward and obtain clarity on this important legal matter
’.
[26]
The Chief Registrar then responded on 11 June 2022 to the judgment
creditor’s abovementioned
email of 17 May. Her reply went as
follows:
‘
Your e-mail below
refers, sorry for the delayed response.
The rule is unclear as to
who brings the application. The instruction that it should be the
Sheriff comes from the Judge President.
Other Sheriffs processed
the application through the chamber book in the past.
However, our latest
directives issued on 1 June 2022 indicate that the Judge who set the
price must attend to the matter. [As will
appear presently, that was
not an entirely accurate statement. The practice directive is quoted
in full in para 27, below.]
In this case Acting Judge
Sievers who is no longer on the bench, set the reserve price.
According to our latest
directives the judge president must be approached to refer the matter
to a judge for determination in open
court.
I will take your e-mail
to the Judge President indicating that you wish to obtain clarity on
his instruction.
I will revert with his
response.’
There
is nothing further in the papers concerning a response from the Judge
President.
[27]
The ‘latest directives’ referred to by the Chief
Registrar were issued by the
Judge President on 1 June 2022. They
provide as follows in relevant part:
‘
33A RESERVE
PRICE /
RULE 46A
1.5cm; margin-bottom: 1cm; line-height: 200%">
1)
In applications to adjust the reserve price in the sale of immovable
property
in terms of
rule 46A
where the reserve price set is not
achieved, it shall be in the sole discretion of the Judge fixing the
initial price to order
that he or she will retain the matter and this
must be reflected in his or her order. The application should ideally
be heard in
open court before a judge.
2)
In the event that the latter is not available, the Judge President
must be approached
to allocate a judge to give appropriate
directives.
3)
Papers shall be served on all the parties. Personal service on the
judgment debtor
is required.’
I
shall revert to the directives later in this judgment.
[28]
The matter came before me in the Third Division on 1 August 2022.
There was nothing on
file to indicate that its enrolment there
happened pursuant to the latest directives. I was not allocated by
the Judge President
‘to give appropriate directives’.
[29]
By that stage the application had become ‘opposed’ by the
judgment debtors.
Opposed matters are ordinarily referred from the
Third Division for hearing on a predetermined date on the opposed
motion court
roll. Apparently resigned to the conclusion that
Rule
46A(9)
reconsiderations were not afforded priority in the Court’s
allocation system, the judgment creditor’s legal
representatives
asked for the matter to be further postponed to 26
January 2023 on the opposed motion court roll, which was the earliest
date that
could be obtained from the registrar’s office. It
does not appear to have been appreciated by any of the parties that
the
reconsideration prescribed by
rule 46A(9)(c)
is a procedural
requirement; it is not a process that can be opposed. It is a process
in which the court must consider any relevant
evidence put before it,
but the process is
not
an adversarial one.
[30]
Appreciating that the situation was entirely unsatisfactory, and at
odds with the indications
in the subrule and the considerations of
practicality that enjoined that these matters be disposed of
expeditiously, I decided
mero motu
to retain the matter and
hear it on the earliest feasible subsequent date, namely 23 August. I
issued directions for the exchange
of papers to render the matter
ripe for hearing on that date.
[31]
In their ‘opposing’ affidavit, the judgment debtors took
a misjoinder point.
They contended that the Sheriff did not have
standing to bring the application. The point was bad, as I shall
explain presently.
They also, misdirectedly, objected to the matter
being entertained as a matter of urgency and contended that there was
no justification
for ‘
dispensing with the time limits and
rules applicable to applications in general
’. Seizing on a
statement in
Changing Tides
at para 37 that the judgment
creditor should satisfy the court that the sale had been properly
advertised, the judgment debtors
contended that the judgment
creditors had failed to discharge their duty to do so. In my view,
their contention was misconceived.
The reconsideration posited by
rule 46A(9)(c)
does not impose an onus on the litigants. If any party
contends that the sale was not properly advertised, it is for them to
raise
the issue and adduce evidence in support of their contention,
which, if it were good, would probably result in the setting aside
of
the sale as invalid rather a reconsideration of the reserve price. In
the absence of such evidence, a court will apply the maxim
omnia
rite esse acta praesumuntur
. But the very fact that these
palpably bad points could be taken by the judgment debtors, who were
legally represented, affords
further illustration of the prevailing
uncertainty and confusion concerning the operation of subrule (9).
[32]
In
Changing Tides
supra, the court determined that an
application by the judgment creditor was necessary to obtain the
reconsideration by the court
required by
rule 46A(9)(c).
Respectfully, whilst acknowledging the considerations of pragmatism
that informed it, I cannot subscribe to that view. It is not
supported by the wording of the subrule, which, in the given
circumstances, directs the sheriff to submit a report to the court
and requires the court receiving such report
ipso facto
to
undertake the necessary reconsideration, irrespective whether anyone
applies for it or not.
[33]
Parties have been making applications for the reconsideration of
reserve prices simply
because the rule does not provide the
procedural framework for getting the sheriff’s report before a
judge and enabling the
judge to obtain the necessary information to
undertake a reconsideration with reference to the several factors
enumerated in
rule 46A(9)(b).
The rule does not put anyone on terms
to institute interlocutory proceedings for the prescribed
reconsideration.
[34]
It is not surprising in the circumstances that resort has been had to
a variety of procedural
methods in an endeavour to make the subrule
work; necessity is after all the mother of invention. The examples
that came before
Fisher J in
Changing Tides
were signally
misconceived, however, because, for the reasons identified by the
learned judge, they fell lamentably short of equipping
the court to
properly undertake the reconsideration consonantly with the subrule’s
express requirements.
[35]
Leaving
aside certain types of application properly brought
ex
parte
,
[9]
the notion of an application posits an adversarial proceeding. As
evident from the discussion above, that is plainly how the judgment
debtors and their legal representatives in the current matter
perceived the process. They thought that the judgment creditor or
the
Sheriff had to make out a case, and that the proceedings fell to be
governed by the procedural rules of evidence – hence
their
objection to the introduction of ‘new matter’ in the
Sheriff’s supplementary affidavits. In my judgment,
the
conception that an application process in the conventional sense is
engaged is misconceived. The judicial reconsideration posited
in
rule
46A(9)(c)
is plainly inquisitorial in character and, unlike in
ordinary adversarial proceedings, the court must be able to call upon
the
Sheriff or the protagonists in the principal
rule 46A
application
to supply it with any information it needs to do the task (see
rule
46A(9)(b)(ix)
and (d)(iv)). It is the rules of inquiry that are
missing.
[36]
The Sheriff has as real an interest in obtaining further directions
from the court as the
judgment creditor does. As described above, the
Sheriff has become party to an executory contract of sale with the
successful bidder
at the auction sale in execution. The contract is
subject to the court’s confirmation. In the current case that
situation
is entrenched by clause 2.2 of the conditions of sale, but
it is a situation that would appear to apply in all cases in which a
fixed reserve price is not attained. That is necessarily implied by
subrule 46A(9)(e). The court can hardly ‘
order that the
property be sold to the person who made the highest offer or bid
’
if that offer or bid did not have binding effect, for the court would
otherwise be ordering a party to conclude a contract,
a power
excluded by the substantive law. Thus, when the court makes such an
order it is in effect confirming a sale that was subject
to its
imprimatur, thereby causing the fulfilment of a condition to which
the contract was subject.
[37]
It is also plain from the requirements of
rule 46A(9)
that the court
can properly undertake the reconsideration prescribed in terms of
para (c) thereof only with updated information
and the opportunity
for input from the protagonists in the original
rule 46A
application.
The rule is deficient in that it does not provide for how those
parties are to be given notice of the reconsideration
or as to in
what manner and by when they should exercise their right to adduce
evidence or address argument.
[38]
In my view, the rule, properly construed, contemplates the
reconsideration exercise prescribed
in terms of
Rule 46A(9)(c)
to be
an extension of the application provided for in subrule (3). The
scheme of the subrule is that the original application continues
on
the basis of supplemented papers, commencing with the Sheriff’s
report. There is no new application to be instituted.
If there were,
one would expect the rule to provide for it. It does not. That does
not surprise me. The exercise that is involved
is, after all, nothing
more than a consideration by the court whether to amend the order
that it has already given in the application
in terms of
rule 46A(3)
so that it can be effectively executed. The reconsideration does not
occur in a new matter.
Rule 46A(9)
plainly implies that a court that
fixes a reserve price in its order is not
functus
until the
contemplated sale has been concluded at or above the determined
reserve price.
[39]
The unfortunate lacunae in subrule (9) require of the court itself to
deal with the consequences
pending the remedial intervention plainly
called for from the Rules Board. The express provisions of the
subrule necessarily imply
that the registrar should place the
Sheriff’s report before a judge and make the necessary
arrangements to render the prescribed
reconsideration ripe for
hearing in open court after a reasonable opportunity has been
afforded to the interested parties (
viz
. the judgment creditor
and debtor and the successful bidder at less than the reserve price
(if there is one)) to adduce such additional
evidence as they might
be advised to.
[40]
The aforegoing would not entail an altogether novel process. In this
Division, for example,
the registrar sets down case management
matters for consideration by case manager judges on defined dates
upon notice to the litigants
that they must file pre-trial minutes by
a stipulated date before the case management meeting is to take
place. It would require
only minor adjustments to that
well-established system to make an equivalent system in respect of
subrule 46A(9) workable.
[41]
The registrar would, in the system that I envisage, determine in
consultation with the
Judge President –
(i)
to which judge the Sheriff’s report should be referred;
(ii)
the date upon which the reconsideration in terms of
Rule 46A(9)(c)
would be heard in open court;
(iii)
the date(s) by which the interested parties would be required to file
supplementary affidavits
and heads of argument, and
issue a notice to the
interested parties timeously informing them of the aforegoing.
All
of these measures would be undertaken mindful of the relative urgency
with the rule maker, for good reason, contemplated that
the
prescribed reconsideration should take place, but also remembering
that a reasonable time would in many such matters be needed
for
updated property valuation reports to be obtained. I cannot think of
any good reason why an interval of more than 3-4 months
should
ordinarily be necessary between the date of the filing of the
Sheriff’s report and the reconsideration of the reserve
price
in open court.
[42]
As mentioned, practice directive 33A (quoted above) has been issued
in an endeavour to
assist in matters in which a reserve price has to
be reconsidered. Counsel reported during the hearing before me that
the directive
has not addressed all the difficulties that
practitioners were experiencing with
rule 46A(9).
The essence of the
practice directive is not incongruent with the system that I have
ventured above might be adopted to meet those
difficulties. So, in a
case where a judge had determined, when fixing a reserve price, that
he or she would retain the matter,
the registrar would place the
sheriff’s report before that judge and inform the parties of
the relevant timetable for the
reconsideration hearing to take place
before that judge rather than a judge allocated by the Judge
President.
[43]
The
practice directive must obviously be construed consonantly with the
rule. The proper construction of the rule, and subrule (9)
in
particular, has been undertaken above. The reference to
‘applications’ in para 1 of the directive accordingly
falls
to be interpreted to mean the reconsiderations prescribed in
rule 46A(9)(c)
, and thus
not
to imply fresh proceedings on notice of motion. The statement in para
1 that the judge determining the ‘
initial
price’ may ‘
retain
the matter
’
is consistent with my construction of subrule (9). Retention can only
refer to an extant matter. The verb ‘retain’
means ‘to
keep in possession’;
[10]
one cannot ‘retain’ an application that has yet to be
made. Para 1 of the directive thus recognises the implication
in
subrule (9) that the judge who initially fixes the reserve price is
not
functus
until the contemplated sale in execution has been concluded at or
above the determined reserve price. In my opinion, the prescribed
reconsideration must take place in open court, rather than only
‘ideally’ so. For the reasons I have sought to
articulate,
it is an extension of the proceedings commenced in terms
of
rule 46A(3).
Such proceedings are ordinary motion proceedings, and
thus subject to the general requirements of
s 32
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[11]
I
cannot in any event imagine how a court could properly undertake a
consideration of the factors set out in
rule 46A(9)(b)
other than in
open court with regard to the submissions thereanent by the
interested parties.
[44]
It will be clear from the foregoing discussion that I consider that
subrule 46A(9) is deserving
of further consideration by the Rules
Board. I shall therefore incorporate in the order to be made a
direction that this judgment
be brought to the Board’s notice.
[45]
Turning now to the reconsideration required in this case.
[46]
The judgment debtors are employed, and in receipt of an income that
will enable them to
obtain alternative accommodation if they are
required to vacate the property if it is sold in execution. As I
shall describe presently,
they have in fact entered into an agreement
to sell the property.
[47]
The property is valued at R1 450 000 on the municipal valuation roll.
The current asking
prices for properties in the neighbourhood range
between R1,78 and R2,495 million. The judgment debtors have refused
to allow a
valuer appointed by the judgment creditor access to the
property to assess the condition of the buildings from the inside. I
have
already referred in this regard to the Sheriff’s report,
which suggests that an internal inspection would show that
considerable
renovation is required. The judgment debtors accept,
however, that a fair forced sale value determination for their
property would
be R1,1 million and they asked for the reserve price
to be revised upwards accordingly. If they are right, and especially
having
regard to the forementioned reported asking prices in the
neighbourhood, there should be bidders aplenty at R1,1 million. If
that
does not turn out to be the case, it would powerfully suggest
that their estimate of the property’s forced sale value is
wrong. Factors such as the reported condition of the interiors and
the presence of defaulting lodgers on the property afford plausible
bases to distinguish the subject property from others in the
neighbourhood that are being marketed without such unfavourable
features.
[48]
The forced sale value of a property is very much a matter of opinion.
What a property will
fetch in a forced sale is determined by what
happens when the property is auctioned. In the current matter, it is
clear that there
was bidding interest and that, even in a competitive
context, the highest bid obtained nine months ago was well below what
the
pundits’ estimates suggested would likely be forthcoming.
The purpose of the sale in execution is to achieve the satisfaction
of the judgment. The procedure does not safeguard the judgment
debtor’s interest in obtaining a market-related price; on
the
contrary, involving a forced sale, it inherently does quite the
opposite. The purpose of
rule 46A
, on the other hand, is to ensure
that execution against a judgment debtor’s primary residence
does not occur in a manner
inconsistent with s 26 of the
Constitution, which is an entirely different matter. To the extent
that para 10 of the judgment in
Changing Tides
might be read
to conflate the two considerations, I must respectfully differ.
Clearly, however, the disposal of anyone’s
home on an
exploitative or starkly unfair basis would unjustifiably impinge on
that person’s right to access to housing,
and it is that
connection that the fixing of a reserve price in terms of rule 46A
comes into play.
[49]
In the current matter the only feature that makes me think that the
highest bid price obtained
thus far might have been bettered is the
fact that the sale took place at the Sheriff’s offices rather
than on-site. If the
subject property is surrounded by other
properties that are evidently marketable at prices much higher than
the R700 000 that was
fetched at the auction at the Sheriff’s
offices, which appear to be situated in an industrial area,
conducting the sale in
execution onsite might enhance the prospect of
more market-price related offers being received.
[50]
The judgment debtors have however concluded a sale of the property
privately for R1,9 million.
A copy of the deed of sale was handed up
the hearing under cover of an affidavit by their attorney, Mr Price.
The judgment debtors
would, of course, not be able to perform in
terms of the contract without obtaining the release of the property
from judicial attachment,
but I understood from the judgment
creditor’s counsel that the mortgagee would have no objection
to the private sale proceeding,
provided that it did so without undue
delay.
[51]
The deed of agreement provides for the payment of a deposit of R190
000 and the sale is
subject to approval by a financial institution on
or before 9 September 2022 of mortgage finance to cover the balance
of the purchase
price. A date for the payment of the deposit is not
expressly stipulated in the agreement, but the implication is that it
was payable
upon acceptance of the purchasers’ offer by the
sellers. The judgment debtors’ attorney stated in his affidavit
that
he had ‘
been informed that the purchasers have effected
payment of the deposit but still await documentary proof of payment
thereof
’.
[52]
In the circumstances, I propose to make an order that will allow a
reasonable opportunity
to the judgment debtors to give transfer of
the property in terms of the private sale agreement, failing which
the judgment creditors
will be authorised to readvertise a sale in
execution without a reserve price to be conducted at the site of the
property. It shall
be a condition of any such sale in execution that
if the highest bid obtained at the readvertised sale does not exceed
that obtained
at the auction held on 7 December 2021, the sale to the
purchaser at that auction (Sara Harding, represented by Yaeesh Soles)
will
be deemed to have been confirmed.
[53]
The judgment debtors’ counsel advanced certain submissions as
to why the judgment
debtors should not be mulcted in costs in respect
of the reconsideration proceedings. I propose to make no order as to
costs, but
it nevertheless remains open to the plaintiff bank, if it
wishes, to enforce the terms of the mortgage contract which bind the
mortgagors to pay any costs incurred by the mortgagee to recover the
mortgage debt.
[54]
An order will issue in terms of Rule 46A(9)(c) and (e) as follows:
1.
The judgment debtors are directed to procure the delivery on or
before 14 September
2022 of an affidavit deposed to by their
attorney, Mr Timothy Oliver Price, confirming (i) that payment of the
deposit due by the
purchasers in terms of the deed of sale, dated 21
August 2022, entered into by the judgment debtors in respect of the
attached
immovable property has been made and that the funds are
being held in the trust account of the conveyancing attorneys, Cohen
Shevel
and Fourie Attorneys, and (ii) written approval (a copy of
which must be attached) has been obtained by the purchasers from a
registered
financial institution in respect of the provision to them
of loan financing for the payment of the balance of the purchase
price
in the sum of R1 710 000.
2.
The original of the affidavit must be filed of record and a copy
thereof, stamped
by the registrar, must be served on the judgment
creditor’s attorney of record.
3.
In the event that an affidavit as provided for in terms of paragraph
1 is not
delivered, or in the event that, notwithstanding the
delivery of the affidavit, transfer of the property to the purchasers
in terms
of the deed of sale is thereafter not effected by 16
November 2022, or such later date as the court (per Binns-Ward J)
may, on
good cause shown, on application made in chambers before that
date, direct, the judgment creditor is authorised to readvertise the
sale in execution of the attached property in the manner provided in
the rules of court.
4.
The sale in execution contemplated in paragraph 3 shall be conducted
as provided
in the rules of court, provided that the Sheriff is
directed to conduct the auction at the site of the attached property.
5.
It shall be a condition of the sale in execution contemplated in
paragraph 3
that in the event of the highest bid at such sale not
exceeding the highest bid obtained at the sale in execution of the
property
conducted on 7 December 2021, the property shall in that
event be deemed to be sold to Sara Harding for the sum of R700 000
and
in terms of the conditions of sale pertaining to that sale in
execution (save as to reserve price).
6.
There is no order as to costs in respect of the reconsideration of
the previously
fixed reserve price.
7.
The Chief Registrar is directed to forward a copy of this judgment to
the Secretary
of the Rules Board for Courts of Law with a request
that it be placed before the Board for consideration.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
Judgment
creditor’s counsel:
M. Alexander
Judgment
creditor’s attorneys
Marais
Müller Hendricks inc.
Cape Town
Judgment
debtors’ counsel:
N. van Zyl
Judgment
debtors attorneys:
Cohen Shevel & Fourie
Parow
[1]
Published
in GG No. 41257 of 17 November 2017.
[2]
At
para 35-40, adopting the reasoning in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Mokebe and Related Cases
[2018]
ZAGPJHC 485 (12 September
2018), 2018 (6) SA 492
(GJ) in para 9-30.
The pertinent principles had, in fact, already been rehearsed - with
reference,
inter
alia
,
to Constitutional Court and appeal court authority - in earlier
decisions of this court before the advent of rule 46A; see
Absa
Bank Ltd v Petersen
2013 (1) SA 481
(WCC) at para 33-35 and
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Bekker and Another and Four Similar Cases
2011 (6) SA 111
(WCC) at para 16-26.
[3]
In
para 63.
[4]
It
was reflected in the conditions of sale.
[5]
As
Fisher J noted in
Changing
Tides 17 (Proprietary) Limited N.O. v Kubheka; Changing Tides 17
(Proprietary) Limited N.O. v Mowasa; Changing Tides
17 (Proprietary)
Limited N.O. v Bucktwar; Changing Tides 17 (Proprietary) Limited
N.O. v Horsley
[2022] ZAGPJHC 59 (15 February 2022) at para 22 ‘
Property
values are not static and the vagaries of the market might render
the original determination of the sale value of the
property
relatively unhelpful to the judge who is called on to determine the
way forward when a sale is not obtained at auction
if an inordinate
time is allowed to pass between the auction and the approach to
court
’.
It is not only the vagaries of the market that can be affected by
the passage of time, but also the condition of the
property and the
position regarding its occupation. Time is of the essence if fixing
reserve prices is to be of fair and meaningful
effect.
[6]
RS 18, 2022, D1-632W, citing
Changing
Tides
supra,
at paragraph 9.
[7]
In
para 11-12.
[8]
The
noun ‘
return
’
is not specially defined in the Act. The relevant definition given
in the
Oxford
Dictionary of the English Language
is ‘an endorsement or report by a court officer or sheriff on
a writ’.
[9]
Curatorship
applications in terms of rule 57 are one example.
[10]
The
Oxford
Dictionary of the English Language
defines the word in the relevant sense as ‘
continue
to have (something); keep possession of
’.
[11]
Section
32 provides: ‘
Save
as is otherwise provided for in this Act or any other law, all
proceedings in any Superior Court must, except in so far as
any such
court may in special cases otherwise direct, be carried on in open
court.
’
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