Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 55South Africa
Naidoo (formerly Padayachee) v Changing Tides 17 (Pty) Ltd NO and Others (1885/2009) [2024] ZAKZDHC 55 (23 August 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Naidoo (formerly Padayachee) v Changing Tides 17 (Pty) Ltd NO and Others (1885/2009) [2024] ZAKZDHC 55 (23 August 2024)
Naidoo (formerly Padayachee) v Changing Tides 17 (Pty) Ltd NO and Others (1885/2009) [2024] ZAKZDHC 55 (23 August 2024)
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sino date 23 August 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Execution –
Residential
property
–
Payment
made and arrears brought up to date – Alleging that original
summons was thereby extinguished – Right
to seek default
judgment on original cause of action had fallen away –
Records show payments were made – Parties
had reinstated
agreement – No amount outstanding – Cause of action
for summons and default judgment had been
extinguished –
Sale in execution was invalid – Uniform Rule 46A.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
No.: 1885/2009
In
the matter between:
VANESSA
NAIDOO (formerly PADAYACHEE)
Applicant
and
CHANGING
TIDES 17 (PTY) LTD
NO
First Respondent
ANWAR
SAYED
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, PIETERMARITZBURG
Third Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT, CHATSWORTH
Fourth Respondent
eTHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
Fifth Respondent
ORDER
The
following orders shall issue:
1.
The credit agreement between the first respondent and the applicant
is reinstated as of 26
October 2021.
2.
The default judgment granted on 9 December 2013, and the subsequent
execution against the
applicant's property, has no force or effect.
3.
The fourth respondent's auction on 26 October 2021 is set aside.
4.
The third respondent is directed to cancel the registration of the
transfer of the property,
Portion 5[...] (of 5[...]) of Erf 1[...]
C[...] ("the property"), into the name of the second
respondent, and is directed
to revive the title deed under
T53562/2003, together with any mortgage bond, or bonds, as registered
against the property in existence
as of 26 October 2021. The first
respondent is directed to give effect to this at its own cost.
5.
The first respondent is directed to pay R119 096.23 (one hundred and
nineteen thousand, and
ninety-six rand, twenty-three cents) to the
second respondent.
6.
The first respondent is directed to pay the second respondents
attorney-client costs as taxed
or agreed, incurred under case number
15800/2022P.
7.
Judgment is granted in favour of the second respondent against the
applicant for payment
of the sum of R195 027.02 (one hundred and
ninety-five thousand, and twenty-seven rand, two cents). Together
with interest at 11.75%
per annum from date of judgment.
8.
The first respondent is directed to pay the second respondent's costs
of this application
with counsel's fees to be on Scale A.
JUDGMENT
HARRISON
AJ
[1]
The applicant, a litigant in person, seeks to set aside the sale in
execution and transfer of
the property, namely, Portion 5[...] (of
5[...]) of Erf 1[...] C[...], 1[...] D[...] Crescent, Moorton,
Chatsworth ("the property").
In seeking to set aside the
sale in execution and the transfer of the property to Anwar Sayed
(the second respondent), the applicant
also seeks an order against
the Registrar of Deeds (the third respondent) to revive the title
deed T53562/2003, in terms of which
the second respondent took
transfer of the property.
[2]
The issues in this matter highlight the need for judicial oversight
of the execution process and
emphasise why Uniform rule 46A plays
such an important part of ensuring the protection of parties'
fundamental rights to housing
as enshrined in s 26 of the
Constitution.
[3]
The applicant took transfer of the property under title deed
T53562/2003, and, in 2008, borrowed
money from Main Street 65 (Pty)
Ltd, which loans was guaranteed by the first respondent, who passed a
mortgage bond over the property
in its favour.
[4]
The loan agreement and mortgage bond were administered by SA Home
Loans. The applicant defaulted
in the repayment and summons was
issued in January 2009. In February 2009 the applicant paid an amount
of R18 093.29 towards the
arrears. This discharged the arrears but
not the costs. The applicant thereafter continued to pay, but fell
into further arrears
later in 2009.
[5]
On 29 October 2009, the applicant signed a consent to judgment and
signed the necessary verifying
affidavit acknowledging an
indebtedness to the first respondent in the sum of R279 866.14, as
well as consenting to an order declaring
the property executable. At
the time of signing the consent to judgment, the arrears and the
indebtedness referred to in the January
2009 summons had been
extinguished.
[6]
The first respondent did not apply for judgment in October 2009, and
only lodged the application
for default judgment on 11 October 2013.
[7]
From the bank statements and the application for default judgment
before me, it is clear that
between the date of the signing of the
confession to judgment, and the application for default judgment,
numerous and various payments
had been made by the applicant towards
the property.
[8]
The application for default judgment had been placed before various
judges of this Division, between
June and December 2012. However, it
was only on 9 December 2013, pursuant to an application launched on
11 October 2013, that the
default judgment was granted on 9 December
2013. When the default judgment was granted for the outstanding
arrears, the order declaring
the immovable property executable was
granted. There was no requirement for an application in terms of rule
46A, as the rule only
came into effect in November 2017.
[1]
[9]
Despite default judgment being granted in December 2013, it is common
cause that the applicant
remained in the property and continued to
make payments towards the property.
[10]
From the statement of account, it is apparent that the parties
continued with the loan, and all arrears were
discharged. The first
respondent continued to accept payments and, as at 1 July 2019, there
was nothing outstanding by the applicant
to the first respondent,
i.e., the parties had reinstated the loan agreement.
[11]
Going back in time to the issue of the summons, the first respondent
admits that there was payment
of the sum of R18 093.29 on 14 February
2009, which would have brought the applicant's arrears up to date. By
virtue of this concession,
the applicant has sought to argue before
me that the basis for the original summons was thereby extinguished
and, accordingly,
the right to seek default judgment on the original
cause of action had fallen away. I shall deal with this issue
hereunder.
[12]
The founding affidavit of the applicant further details how certain
arrears were 'written off' during or
about January 2015, which write
off she contends arose out of a recapitalisation of the outstanding
debt, such that the monthly
instalment increased from R3 283 per
month, to R3 514.41 for the remaining period of the loan.
[13]
Whilst the first respondent has denied the write off, in the
answering affidavit it concedes that it did '... by agreement
with
the applicant, grant various indulgences to the applicant with regard
to her repayment obligations under the terms of her
loan ... '.
[14]
These allegations and concessions relate to a time after the default
judgment had been granted and were clearly intended
to be a
reinstatement of the original loan agreement. Crucial to the
concession is that the first respondent admits that the indulgences
were 'by agreement', and that the records show payments were made. It
is clear from the statements that the debt for the cause
of action
for the 2009 summons had long since been extinguished.
[15]
The applicant again fell into arrears with her new monthly
instalments, and a further settlement agreement was concluded
during
or about December 2020, which settlement agreement, it is common
cause, was not adhered to by the applicant. Arising out
of the
failure by the applicant to pay the amounts under that settlement
agreement, the first respondent dusted off the default
judgment
granted in December 2013, issued a warrant of execution, and sold the
property on 26 October 2021, at a sale in execution
conducted by the
fourth respondent.
[16]
Pursuant to that sale, the property was transferred into the name of
the second respondent by deed of transfer T22701/2022.
That transfer
was effected on 5 July 2022.
[17]
The second respondent paid the following:
(a)
purchase price to sheriff:
R102 000.00
(b)
sheriffs commission:
R6 980.50
(c)
transfer fees:
R10 115.73
Total:
R119 096.23
[18]
In effecting transfer of the property, the second respondent
discharged the arrear rates, electricity and
water owing to the fifth
respondent, in the sum of R195 027.02.
[19]
After transfer to the second respondent, the applicant has remained
in the property. The second respondent
has subsequently launched
proceedings in Pietermaritzburg High Court under case number
15800/2022P, for the eviction of the applicant
from the property.
[20]
That eviction application has been opposed and this application was
subsequently launched by the applicant
in January 2023. In launching
the application, the applicant's intention is clearly not only to
secure the retransfer of the property,
but also avoid the eviction
proceedings which have been instituted by the second respondent.
[21]
The effect of granting an order in favour of the applicant and
setting aside the transfer, will also dispose
of the matter in
Pietermaritzburg, a factor which I must consider. The second
respondent has detailed that he has spent R25 836.63
in legal costs
in the eviction application. Whilst these may be attorney-client
charges, there was no dispute when the matter was
heard, that the
second respondent was an innocent party who has expended substantial
amounts for no benefit. Accordingly, in addition
to the R119 096.23
referenced in paragraph 17 above, the second respondent is out of
pocket for:
(a)
rates, electricity, and water:
R195 027.02
(b)
legal expenses:
[2]
R25 836.63
R220 863.65
[22]
The second respondent has, in his papers, asked that he be refunded
all monies paid by him. The order sought
by the applicant also
contemplates that the first respondent repay the proceeds of the sale
in execution, and the fourth respondent
repay his commission.
[23]
The applicant has conceded that the second respondent has paid
amounts to the fifth respondent and suggests
that she will repay
amounts paid on her behalf 'once the application has been
determined'. Despite that undertaking, the applicant's
poor payment
history demonstrates a lack of candour, which I shall deal with
hereunder.
[24]
In opposing this application, the first respondent has acknowledged
the payment of R18 093.29 on 14 February
2009. The first respondent
concedes that there was the payment, however, seeks to suggest that
although the arrears were paid,
there was still the taxed costs
outstanding, and this entitled the first respondent to proceed with
the default judgment in due
course. The first respondent has also
sought to rely on the subsequent breaches of the 2020 settlement
agreement, as this in some
way acknowledged the 2013 default judgment
based on the 2009 summons. I am not impressed with this argument, or
the submissions,
particularly as I have pointed above, the arrears
were brought up to date and, at various times, there was nothing
outstanding
on the account and, in fact, there are various occasions
when the applicant appears to have been in advance of her monthly
obligations.
[25]
The fundamental issue is whether the first respondent was entitled to
proceed with execution against the
applicant's property in 2021 based
on the 2013 default judgment, when the parties had quite clearly
conducted themselves on the
basis that the original loan agreement
had been reinstated through the continuous payments and the bringing
of the account up to
date, as I have detailed above.
[26]
The original court file relating to this case, was archived and the
only documents available in this regard
were the digital copy of the
file. That digital copy reflects that there were various queries
raised between June 2012 and December
2013 when the default judgment
was granted. I sought clarity from the first respondent in this
regard and, as a result, all parties
filed submissions from which it
came to light that the queries raised by the various judges between
June 2012 and December 2013,
related to the service of the papers.
The applicant also made further submissions that as regards the
municipal accounts, that
have been paid by the second respondent,
these should be repaid by the fifth respondent to the second
respondent (despite the fact
that she is the one who has secured the
benefit and enjoyment of the property and used these municipal
services).
[27]
The first respondent furnished a complete breakdown of the account,
demonstrating the various payments and
how the parties conducted
themselves in regard to the account proceeding after the default
judgment, and from 2013 to 2021.
[28]
The applicant, in her heads of argument in this matter, has enjoined
that I should look benevolently on her
documents and submissions as
she is litigating in person, cannot afford legal representation, and
that I should not hold her to
the same standard of accuracy, skill,
or precision as is required by lawyers.
[3]
I have done so. The crux of the applicant's argument is that by
payment of the arrears amount in 2009 she extinguished the basis
for
the cause of action for the 2009 summons, and that the credit
agreement was then reinstated. In this regard, she relies
specifically
on
Nkata
v FirstRand Bank Ltd
.
[4]
[29]
The first respondent has indicated that, notwithstanding the payment
of the arrears amount, there was still
the issue of costs outstanding
which had not been paid at that time. The applicant has correctly
identified from the
Nkata
judgment that those legal costs were
not yet due at the time she made the initial payment and were only
due when taxed or agreed.
There is no evidence before me that those
costs were ever taxed or agreed.
[30]
Notwithstanding this argument, it is clear from the papers that the
parties had reinstated the agreement
and that at least by 2016, there
was no amount outstanding. The cause of action for the 2009 summons
and the 2013 default judgment
had been extinguished. The applicant
has further argued that in light of the
Nkata
judgment, and
the reinstatement, the subsequent sale in execution was invalid and
the transfer of the property and the registration
in the name of the
second respondent, stands to be set aside.
[31]
As regards setting aside the transfer and reinstating of the old
title deed, the applicant quoted various
authorities, including
Legator
McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
[5]
and Knox NO v Mofokeng
and Others.
[6]
[32]
As I find that the sale in execution was improper for want of a valid
causa, the entire sale and the transfer
to the second respondent is
invalid. The reinstatement of the original title deed must follow.
[33]
The first respondent, in opposing this application, has sought to
rely heavily on the decisions of
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC and Another v Bondev Developments (Pty)
Ltd
[7]
and
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Enquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector,
including
Organs of State and Others
,
[8]
the delay in bringing and prosecuting this application should
preclude the applicant obtaining relief as her delays are
inexplicable
and that the underlying motive for this application is
to avoid the consequences of the eviction application in the
Pietermaritzburg
High Court.
[34]
As persuasive as these arguments may be, they overlook the
fundamental issue that it is a house which is
the applicant's primary
residence, which is at the heart of this matter. There is a need to
protect the constitutional right recognised
in s26 of the
Constitution. That constitutional right trumps the delay argument.
[35]
The second respondent has argued that he is an innocent party and
that he is out of pocket. He is quite clearly
an innocent party who
has expended money without any gain and, in light of the concessions
made that these amounts have been paid
and that there is no dispute
as regards the municipal and other expenses which he has discharged,
I have sought to indemnify him
as far as possible as set out in the
orders hereunder.
[36]
As regards the costs of the eviction that application was
legitimately brought by the second respondent against
the applicant.
However, the costs of that application stand to be discharged by the
first respondent, as it was the first respondent's
conduct which gave
rise to the sale in execution and the eviction flows as a direct
consequence.
[37]
The first respondent, through its conduct and by the acceptance of
payments subsequent to the issuing of
summons, as well as subsequent
to the granting of the default judgment in 2013, conducted itself in
a manner consistent with the
reinstatement of the loan agreement. In
this regard, the first respondent's conduct mirrors that of
Nkata
v First National Bank
,
[9]
and the facts are very similar as regards the parties' conduct save
and except that in present circumstances, not only is the first
respondent's conduct more egregious due to the 2009 default having
been discharged even prior to the seeking of the default judgment
in
2013, but the renegotiation and the settling of all arrears,
including in 2016. This demonstrates that the cause of action for
declaring the property executable had long since ceased to exist when
that default judgment was dusted off in 2020, and used as
a means of
execution against the applicant.
[38]
It has oft been said that litigation is not a game. Litigation is
also not a game show where a plaintiff can "bank"
a breach
and default judgment, and "bank" the declaration of
executing against immovable property, and then, at its own
instance
and at a time when it suits them, play the default judgment and
execution order as a trump card to enforce as against
a recalcitrant
debtor.
[39]
In light of the similarity of the facts in the present matter with
that of
Nkata
, it is clear that the applicant is entitled to
relief. The exact form of that relief includes the right to the
reinstatement of
the title deed into the applicant's name. The
applicant cannot escape the consequences of the reinstatement.
[40]
The reinstatement of the loan agreement requires, in present
circumstances, a reinstatement of the security
which the first
respondent held, namely the mortgage bond over the property.
[41]
Whilst I am aware that this is not relief that was tendered by the
applicant, in present circumstances, the
restoration of the status
quo ante requires an order for the reinstatement of that mortgage
bond.
[42]
As regards the amounts outstanding, and with the reinstatement of the
loan agreement, that must be as at
the date of the sale in execution
namely October 2021.
[43]
By virtue of the first respondent's conduct, I direct that interest
and the amount to be reinstated will
be as at the date of the sale in
execution, namely 26 October 2021, and that the first respondent is
directed to reinstate the
agreement as at that date. In reinstating
at that date, the first respondent is not entitled to raise any legal
charges relating
to the sale in execution, or the execution of the
property, and those amounts must be reversed from the account.
[44]
This will mean that the applicant will become liable for monthly
instalments in accordance with the reinstated
agreement as of
September 2024.
[45]
As regards the second respondent, those amounts which have been paid
to the fifth respondent are amounts
which are conceded by the
applicant and I, accordingly, grant judgment in his favour against
the applicant for such amounts. The
applicant cannot avoid this
liability, for indeed, she has enjoyed the benefit of and made use of
the lights and water. She has
benefited at the expense of the second
respondent.
[46]
I am disinclined to reinstate it in favour of the fifth respondent as
suggested by the applicant. This would
mean that the fifth respondent
would have to institute its own action against the applicant for the
recovery of such amounts, which
amounts the applicant has conceded
she has received the benefit.
[47]
The costs of the eviction proceedings under Pietermaritzburg High
Court case number 15800/2022P. Those costs
are a direct consequence
of the first respondent's conduct and, accordingly, I direct that the
first respondent pay the second
respondent's costs of that
application, on an attorney-client scale, as taxed or agreed.
[48]
Finally, as regards reversing the amounts paid by the second
respondent, the first respondent is directed
to reimburse the second
respondent in the sum of R119 096.23 as calculated and set out in
paragraph 17 above.
[49]
As the applicant is a litigant in person, she has not incurred any
costs, however, the second respondent,
having been represented and
having been successful in reclaiming monies expended by him, and
having been the innocent party in
these entire proceedings.
Order
[50]
In the circumstances, I make the following orders:
1.
The credit agreement between the first respondent and the applicant
is reinstated as of 26
October 2021.
2.
The default judgment granted on 9 December 2013, and the subsequent
execution against the
applicant's property, has no force or effect.
3.
The fourth respondent's auction on 26 October 2021 is set aside.
4.
The third respondent is directed to cancel the registration of the
transfer of the property,
Portion 5[...] (of 5[...]) of Erf 1[...]
C[...] ("the property"), into the name of the second
respondent, and is directed
to revive the title deed under
T53562/2003, together with any mortgage bond, or bonds, as registered
against the property in existence
as of 26 October 2021. The first
respondent is directed to give effect to this at its own cost.
5.
The first respondent is directed to pay R119 096.23 (one hundred and
nineteen thousand, and
ninety-six rand, twenty three cents) to
the second respondent.
6.
The first respondent is directed to pay the second respondents
attorney-client costs as taxed
or agreed, incurred under case number
15800/2022P.
7.
Judgment is granted in favour of the second respondent against the
applicant for payment
of the sum of R195 027.02 (one hundred and
ninety-five thousand, and twenty-seven rand, two cents). Together
with interest at 11.75%
per annum from date of judgment.
8.
The first respondent is directed to pay the second respondent's costs
of this application
with counsel's fees to be on Scale A.
G
M HARRISON AJ
Appearances
For
the Applicant:
ln
person
Address:
135
Damarosa Crescent
Moorton,
Chatsworth
Durban
Tel:
078
450 1198
Email:
vanessapillay2908@gmail.com
For
the 1st Respondents:
Mr. G
Randalls
Instructed
by:
STRAUS
DALY INCORPORATED
Address:
41
Richeford Circle
Ridgeside
Office Park
Umhlanga
Durban
Email:
TMthembu@strausdaly.co.za
For
the 2
nd
Respondents:
Ms. A
Govender
Instructed
by:
Y
CASSIM & Associates.
Address:
Unit
4, 341 Musgrave Road
Musgrave
Durban
Email:
inventer100@gmail.com
Date
reserved:
21
MAY 2023
Date
of delivery:
23
AUGUST 2024
[1]
Government Notice R1272 of 17 November 2017.
[2]
These are not taxed costs and the amount is determined from a
detailed statement of account, "AS9", index papers at
180.
[3]
Xinwa
and Others v Volkswagen of South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2003] ZACC 7
;
2003 (4) SA 390
(CC)
para 13.
[4]
Nkata v
FirstRand Bank Ltd
2016
(4) SA 257
(CC).
[5]
Legator
McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
2010
(1) SA 35 (SCA).
[6]
Knox NO
v Mofokeng and Others
2013
(4) SA 46 (GSJ).
[7]
Lodhi 2
Properties Investments CC and Another v Bondev Developments (Pty)
Ltd
2007
(6) SA 87 (SCA).
[8]
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Enquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State and Others
2021
(11) BCLR 1263 (CC).
[9]
Nkata v First
National Bank
2016
(4) SA 257
(CC)
sino noindex
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