Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 176South Africa
Wesbank, a division of Firstrand Bank Ltd v Bester Kellerman Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2567 / 2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 176 (9 September 2022)
Headnotes
judgment against the third defendant for the payment of R1 540 015,00 plus interest and costs. The pleaded case is that the above amount is due and payable by the third defendant (jointly and severally with the first and second defendant), in terms of a written finance agreement.[1] The plaintiff entered into the agreement with the first defendant[2] and, the second and third defendants bound themselves in accordance with the provisions of two discrete suretyship agreements.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Wesbank, a division of Firstrand Bank Ltd v Bester Kellerman Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2567 / 2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 176 (9 September 2022)
Wesbank, a division of Firstrand Bank Ltd v Bester Kellerman Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2567 / 2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 176 (9 September 2022)
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sino date 9 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
No. 2567 / 2021
In
the matter between:
WESBANK,
a division of FIRSTRAND BANK LTD
Plaintiff
and
BESTER
KELLERMAN HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
WILLEM
BESTER
Second Defendant
JACO
VISSER
KELLERMAN
Third defendant
Coram:
Wille, J
Heard:
5
th
of September 2022
Delivered:
9
th
of September 2022
JUDGMENT
WILLE,
J:
Introduction
[1]
The
plaintiff seeks summary judgment against the third defendant for the
payment of R1 540 015,00 plus interest and costs. The pleaded
case is
that the above amount is due and payable by the third defendant
(jointly and severally with the first and second defendant),
in terms
of a written finance agreement.
[1]
The plaintiff entered into the agreement with the first defendant
[2]
and, the second and third defendants bound themselves in accordance
with the provisions of two discrete suretyship agreements.
[2]
The
principal debtor operated a motor vehicle dealership and the
agreement provided the principal debtor with a line of credit to
allow it to make purchases of vehicles for resale, subject to the
terms and conditions of the agreement, read with provisions of
the
plaintiff’s facility letter.
[3]
I mention the facility letter because the third defendant seems to
underpin one of his core defences on certain terms recorded
in the
facility letter in order to contend for breach of the agreement at
the instance of the plaintiff.
[3]
What makes this matter somewhat more
problematic for the third defendant is that a judgment was previously
granted against the principal
debtor and the second defendant in
terms of the agreement and the co-surety obligations for payment of
the capital amount, interest
and costs as claimed in the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim. Despite this, the third defendant entered an
appearance to
defend the action, filed a plea and opposed the
applicant’s summary judgment application.
The
plaintiff’s case
[4]
The plaintiff’s position is that
neither the plea nor the affidavit opposing summary judgment set out
any facts that if proven
at trial, would provide the third defendant
with a valid defence against the plaintiff’s claim and
accordingly the plaintiff
seeks summary judgment as prayed.
[5]
The plaintiff’s case is; (a) that the
first defendant breached the terms of the agreement; (b) that as a
result the plaintiff
became entitled to payment of the full amount
outstanding in terms of the agreement and, (c) that due to the terms
of the agreement
(read with the suretyship agreement signed by the
third defendant) the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against the
third defendant
jointly and severally (with the other defendants),
for the outstanding amount as claimed.
The
case for the third defendant
[6]
It is common cause between the plaintiff
and the third defendant that the agreement was entered into and that
the third defendant
signed (and is bound by) the suretyship relied
upon by the plaintiff. Despite this, the third defendant denies that
he is liable
to the plaintiff. He does so on the basis that the first
defendant has a valid defence against the plaintiff’s claim and
that he as a surety can accordingly not be held liable in terms of
the suretyship.
[7]
The position advanced is that the first
defendant purchased certain vehicles in line with the agreement and
the second defendant
thereafter unlawfully sold eight of these
vehicles to third parties and unlawfully appropriated the proceeds of
those sales for
his own benefit. The third defendant advances that in
these circumstances the plaintiff was obliged to mitigate its damages
and
that as a consequence the third defendant is not liable to the
plaintiff for the amount claimed under and in terms of his surety
obligation.
Consideration
[8]
It
is trite that in order for a defendant in summary judgment
proceedings to avoid summary judgment, the defendant has to set out
facts which, if proven at trial, would provide the defendant with a
valid defence in law. These defences fall to be set out with
sufficient particularity to allow the court to be satisfied with the
bona
fides
thereof and should not be set out in a manner that is needlessly
bald, vague or sketchy.
[4]
The
plaintiff advances that the third defendant has failed to comply with
the abovementioned requirements and that summary judgment
should
accordingly be granted, as prayed.
[9]
In the third defendant’s plea, he
does not engage with the issue of whether or not the plaintiff was
paid for the vehicles
(which on the third defendant’s own
version) came into the possession of the first defendant in terms of
the agreement. Put
in another way, there is no dispute that the first
defendant failed to settle the amounts in respect of the vehicles in
accordance
with the agreement.
[10]
As a matter of logic, the obligation to
ensure payment of the amounts due in terms of the agreement was
initially that of the first
defendant as the principal debtor. The
third defendant guaranteed this payment obligation by way of his
surety for these amounts
due to the plaintiff. The shield raised that
the second defendant stole from the principal debtor by selling the
vehicles (obtained
in terms of the agreement), for his own benefit
does not on the facts of this matter, amount to a valid defence in
law against
the claim by the plaintiff.
[11]
In an attempt to overcome this legal hurdle
the third defendant pleads that there were additional express,
implied or tacit terms
to the agreement, to the effect; (a) that the
plaintiff had an obligation to conduct monthly stock audits; (b) that
the plaintiff
would only extend credit in respect of vehicles in
which the plaintiff registered itself as a titleholder and, (c) that
should
the plaintiff be advised or it comes to the plaintiff’s
knowledge that goods were used in an unlawful manner, the plaintiff
would immediately take the necessary steps to mitigate any loss to be
suffered (including cancelling the agreement and re-taking
possession
of the relevant vehicles that were used unlawfully).
[12]
By way of elaboration, the third defendant
pleads that the plaintiff breached these new alleged terms because;
(a) the plaintiff
did not register itself as title holder in respect
of the vehicles in question; (b) the plaintiff despite being informed
of these
unlawful actions failed to cancel the agreement and re-take
possession of the vehicles (so as to mitigate its potential damages)
and, (c) the plaintiff failed to conduct monthly stock audits.
[13]
The plaintiff says that in these
circumstances, the third defendant has failed to set out a triable
defence and has failed to put
up a
bona
fide
defence in his affidavit opposing
summary judgment because of the following, namely (a) that the
question of whether the first
defendant is liable for the amount
claimed has already been determined and this liability now cannot be
disputed by the third defendant;
(b) that it would not in any event
as a matter of law provide the third defendant with a valid defence
if he could show that the
alleged terms contended for by him, were
incorporated in the agreement and breached by the plaintiff; (c) that
the third defendant
has failed to put up the facts that it would need
to prove in order to establish the terms he relies upon at a trial
and, (d) accordingly
the third defendant has failed to set out a
bona
fide
defence as required in terms of
the appropriate court rules.
[14]
The shield advanced by the third defendant
is that the plaintiff breached the agreement between it and the first
defendant and that
the third defendant would accordingly have a
defence against plaintiff’s claim. Problematic to this defence
is that the first
defendant cannot dispute its liability to the
plaintiff as judgment has already been granted against the principal
debtor in favour
of the plaintiff. A court has rendered a judgment
that the first defendant is liable for the amount claimed when it
granted judgment
and the third defendant accordingly is now liable
for the amount of the judgment debt in terms of his surety
obligation.
[15]
Adopting a liberal and favourable approach
to the determination of this matter and accepting for a moment that
it is open for the
third defendant to dispute his liability on the
basis that the first defendant has a defence against the plaintiff’s
claim
(despite the judgment), it is difficult for me to discern how
the pleaded case by the third defendant (even if it were to be
established
at trial), would constitute a defence to the plaintiff’s
claim. Put in another way, the third defendant’s defence (as
currently formulated), would not have the effect that the third
defendant would somehow be discharged from the obligation to repay
the monies due to the plaintiff in terms of the agreement.
[16]
This
is manifestly so because as a general proposition, a breach by a
creditor will not necessarily have the effect that a debtor
is
excused from performing in terms of the contract unless; (a) the
wrongful conduct of the creditor made the performance by the
debtor
impossible; (b) where the creditor’s intention can be ascribed
to a deliberate intention to prevent the performance
by the debtor
or; (c) it amounts to a breach of an express or implied term of the
agreement to the effect that such breach would
provide an excuse.
[5]
It cannot be seriously contended that the purported breach of the
terms relied on by the third defendant falls into either category
(a)
or (b) as referenced above.
[17]
The position in connection with (c) is
euthanized by the fact that there are no express terms in the
agreement to the effect that
the alleged failures to register
vehicles in the plaintiff’s name, conduct monthly audits or
take steps to recover assets
stolen by the representative of the
first defendant, would create an entitlement to refrain from making
payment of the monies due
in terms of the agreement.
[18]
On the contrary, the agreement provides
that stock audits would be conducted at the sole discretion of the
plaintiff’s management
and the agreement provides that the
first defendant may not use the goods for use by members or directors
of the first defendant.
The agreement also indicates that the first
defendant may not dispose of the goods until it becomes the owner
thereof in terms
of the agreement. The implied terms contended for
are accordingly euthanized by the express terms of the written
agreement. The
third defendant’s pleaded case is for certain
tacit, implied or express terms. However, these are difficult to
understand
as the terms of the agreement between the plaintiff and
the first defendant are admitted by the third defendant. Simply put,
there
are no tacit, implied or express terms incorporated in the
agreement in line with those alleged by the third defendant.
[19]
The agreement itself provides that it is
the sole record of the agreement and no evidence would be permissible
at a trial to establish
any express terms not recorded therein. This
is in line with the established rules of evidence. In addition, there
could be no
question of finding that such terms (as contended for),
are tacitly or impliedly incorporated into the agreement as this will
be
in conflict with the express terms of the agreement.
[20]
Moreover, the parties expressly agreed that
it would be the duty of the first defendant to provide the plaintiff
with the registration
documents indicating the plaintiff’s
ownership of the vehicles purchased in terms of the agreement. In
addition, the first
defendant was obligated to keep the original
registration documents in safe custody on behalf of the plaintiff in
terms of the
agreement.
[21]
Accordingly, it is difficult to understand
under what circumstances the tacit or implied terms as contended for
by the third defendant,
could as a matter of law, be capable of being
imported into the agreement to the effect that (should it come to the
knowledge of
the plaintiff that the goods were used in an unlawful
manner), the plaintiff had an obligation to immediately take steps to
mitigate
its loss in connection therewith.
[22]
Further,
I have to consider the issue of whether or not the defence put up by
the third defendant is indeed a
bona
fide
defence. On this score, I do not have to cast my net very far. The
legal position when dealing with the now amended summary judgment
court rules and their impact on applications for summary judgment is
now settled. I take,
inter
alia
,
the following passages from the judgment in
Tumileng
:
[6]
‘…
Rule
32(3), which regulates what is required from a defendant in its
opposing affidavit, has been left substantively unamended in
the
overhauled procedure. That means that the test remains what it always
was: has the defendant disclosed a bona fide (i.e. an
apparently
genuinely advanced, as distinct from sham) defence? There is no
indication in the amended rule that the method of determining
that
has changed. The classical formulations in Maharaj and Breitenbach v
Fiat SA as to what is expected of a defendant seeking
to successfully
oppose an application for summary judgment therefore remain of
application’
[7]
‘…
As
has always been the position, the opposing affidavit must disclose
fully the nature and grounds of the defence and the material
facts
relied upon therefor. The purpose of the opposing affidavit also
remains, as historically the case, to demonstrate that the
defendant
has a bona fide defence to the action…’
‘…
There
is thus no substantive change in the nature of the 'burden', if that
is what it is, placed on a defendant in terms of the
procedure.
However, the broader form of supporting affidavit that is
contemplated in terms of the amended rule 32(2)(b), will in
some
cases require more of a defendant in respect of the content of its
opposing affidavit than was the case in the pre-amendment
regime, for
the defendant will be expected to engage with the plaintiff's
averments concerning the pleaded defence.. ’
[8]
[23]
As far as the
bona
fides
issue is concerned, the following
is apposite, namely;
‘…
The
assessment of whether a defence is bona fide is made with regard to
the manner in which it has been substantiated in the opposing
affidavit; viz. upon a consideration of the extent to which 'the
nature and grounds of the defence and the material facts relied
upon
therefor' have been canvassed out by the deponent. That was the
method by which the court traditionally tested, insofar as
it was
possible on paper, whether the defence described by the defendant was
'contrived', in other words, not
bona
fide
.
And the amended subrule 32(3)(b) implies that it should continue to
be the indicated method…’
[9]
[24]
The test for resisting summary judgment
accordingly remains the same. In certain circumstances when a plea is
filed, it may be more
difficult for a defendant to resist summary
judgment if the plea does not engage fully with the plaintiff’s
formulated claims.
In this case, it is what the third defendant
omitted to do in support of his defence which is of significance,
namely; (a) that
he failed to provide sufficient details of his
preferred defence; (b) that he failed to state the amounts allegedly
misappropriated
by the second defendant and, (c) that he failed to
put up any documents in support of these alleged misappropriated
payments by
the second defendant.
[25]
In addition,
the
third defendant argues that the plaintiff's application for summary
judgment is defective because the plaintiff in his affidavit
does not
engage with the third defendant’s defences as raised in his
plea with sufficient detail. On this, I disagree because
the
plaintiff in his affidavit is not obliged to deal with the defences
raised by the third defendant, in detail. I say this because
the
position in our current jurisprudence is that the plaintiff needs to
go no further than the required standard established in
the previous
regime that existed when a plaintiff chartered for an application for
summary judgement.
[26]
Accordingly, I
disagree with the submissions made by the third defendant in seeking
to blame the plaintiff for the third defendant’s
failure to set
out a proper defence in his affidavit opposing the application for
summary judgment. As a further arrow in his bow,
the third defendant,
in the alternative, seeks a postponement of the summary judgment
application in order to pilot an application
for the rescission of
the judgment that was granted against the principal debtor and the
second defendant. Notably, no such application
was before the court
at the time of the hearing of the application for summary judgment.
[27]
The core defence by
the third defendant seems to be that he is not liable as a surety
because the plaintiff did not undertake a
stock audit of the vehicles
which were subject to the finance granted under the agreement between
the plaintiff and the principal
debtor. The agreement does not
support this interpretation as suggested by the third defendant. On a
plain reading thereof, it
is clear that the plaintiff was not obliged
to undertake a stock audit but, merely possessed the right to
undertake such a stock
audit.
[28]
The plaintiff
emphasised that a judgment had already been granted against the
principal debtor (under the agreement) for specific
performance and
under the circumstances, the defences contended for by the third
defendant do not assist him. The third defendant
is seeking an order
in terms of which the plaintiff was obliged to mitigate his damages
so as reduce the amount due owing and payable
by the third defendant
under and in terms of his surety obligation. This is against the
backdrop of the trite principle that a
court always has discretion as
to whether or not to grant specific performance or damages.
[29]
In my view, the facts
of this case dictate that no such attack on the court's discretion is
warranted because the third defendant
has made no allegations, nor
put up any documentary evidence of the values of the alleged vehicles
that were sold and the actual
amounts allegedly misappropriated by
the second defendant.
These
omissions go to the issue of the
bona
fides
of the third defendant. In order
to successfully resist summary judgment, the third defendant was
required,
inter alia
,
to fully disclose the facts relied upon by him for his defences. This
has in my view not been achieved.
[30]
It
is trite law that in order to resist summary judgment the defences
put up by the third defendant, must of necessity be sufficiently
complete and particularised. They do not have to be precise, but they
must be complete. The third defendant was obliged to fully
disclose
the nature and grounds of his defences and the material facts relied
upon, which he genuinely desires and intends to adduce
at the
trial.
[10]
[31]
In my view, the third defendant failed to
engage with the plaintiff’s claim to any significant material
extent. I say this
for three reasons. Firstly, the third defendant
explicitly concedes that there is an amount owing to the plaintiff.
Secondly, the
third defendant in his plea admitted the terms of the
agreement and the terms of his surety obligation. Finally, the third
defendant
admitted that a judgment had been granted against the
principal debtor and his co-surety for the relief claimed by the
plaintiff.
Conclusion
and costs
[32]
In conclusion, I find that the third
defendant’s affidavit opposing summary judgment does not set
out sufficient identifiable
facts with admissible evidence to render
the quantum of the claim by the plaintiff, to be a triable issue. In
all the circumstances
of this matter, it is ordered as follows;
1.
That summary judgment is hereby granted against the third defendant
(to rank
as a joint and several judgment with the judgment obtained
against the first and the second defendants), the one paying, the
other
to be absolved for;
1.1
Payment of the sum of R1 540 015,00.
1.2
Interest on the said amount, at the rate of 7% (per annum, compounded
monthly), from the
date of the service of the summons to the date of
payment, both days inclusive.
1.3
Costs of suit (as between party and party), as taxed or agreed.
E.
D. WILLE
Judge
of the High Court
Cape
Town
[1]
The
Floor-Plan Agreement (the ‘agreement’).
[2]
The
principal debtor.
[3]
It
is recorded in this letter that if there is a conflict between it
and the agreement, the agreement shall prevail.
[4]
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976
(2) SA 226
(T) at 228.
[5]
Acadamy
of Learning (Pty) Ltd v Hanckock & Others
2001 (1) SA 952
at par 33.
[6]
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020 JDR 0747 (WCC).
[7]
Tumileng
at paragraph 13.
[8]
Tumileng
at paragraph 24.
[9]
Tumileng
at
paragraph 25.
[10]
Breitendach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976 (2) SA 226
(CT).
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