Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 58South Africa
Scania Finance Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Hulk Haulers (Pty) Limited (D8414/2020) [2024] ZAKZDHC 58 (30 August 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Scania Finance Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Hulk Haulers (Pty) Limited (D8414/2020) [2024] ZAKZDHC 58 (30 August 2024)
Scania Finance Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Hulk Haulers (Pty) Limited (D8414/2020) [2024] ZAKZDHC 58 (30 August 2024)
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sino date 30 August 2024
# IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
## CaseNo:D8414/2020
Case
No:
D8414/2020
In
the matter between:
# SCANIA FINANCE SOUTHERN
AFRICA (PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT
SCANIA FINANCE SOUTHERN
AFRICA (PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT
and
# HULK HAULERS (PTY)
LIMITED
RESPONDENT
HULK HAULERS (PTY)
LIMITED
RESPONDENT
This judgment was handed
down electronically by transmission to the parties’
representatives by email. The date and time for
hand down is deemed
to be 9h30 on 30 August 2024.
# ORDER
ORDER
## The following order is
issued:
The following order is
issued:
1.
The rule nisi issued on 28 October 2021 is
confirmed.
2.
The respondent is placed under final
liquidation.
3.
The costs of the application and the
interlocutory application are to be costs in the liquidation.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
MOODLEY J:
[1]
In this application which served before me
on the opposed motion roll, the applicant, Scania Finance Southern
Africa (Pty) Ltd,
seeks an order placing the respondent, Hulk Haulers
(Pty) Limited, under final liquidation. The order placing the
respondent under
a provisional liquidation order was granted by
Shapiro AJ on 28 October 2021. The applicant has complied with the
terms of the
provisional order. The respondent opposes this
application, as it did the application to place it under provisional
liquidation,
on several grounds. The main grounds of its opposition
are that the applicant’s claim against the respondent is not a
liquid
claim and is disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds.
## Factual matrix
Factual matrix
[2]
It is common cause that the parties
concluded a financial lease agreement on 22 June 2017, which together
with the transaction schedule,
the standard general terms and
conditions and other addendums thereto are referred to as ‘the
agreement’. In terms
of the agreement, the respondent leased
from the applicant a vehicle described as ‘SCANIA 2017 Scania
R460 LA 6x4 MSZ’
(‘the vehicle’). Under the general
terms and conditions upon which the vehicle was leased (‘GTC’),
specifically
clause 18 thereof, the ownership of the vehicle remained
with the applicant and the respondent acquired the right to possess
the
vehicle while the agreement was in force. Clause 17 of the GTC
provided that the right to retain the vehicle ‘is limited on
a
month to month basis and subject thereto that the Lessee pays its
monthly rentals’. Clause 19 of the GTC provided that
in the
event of termination of the agreement (even if disputed) the
respondent no longer had a right to possession of the vehicle.
The
respondent further undertook to pay punctually to the applicant the
amounts specified in the contract schedule for the use
of the
vehicle, in consecutive monthly payments for a period of 48 months,
and agreed that it would not be entitled to withhold
any payment if
the vehicle was defective, damaged or could not be used or operated
(clauses 29 and 31 of the GTC). In the event
of a material breach of
the agreement by the respondent, the respondent accepted liability
inter alia, for “an amount equal
to the amounts that would be
payable for the unexpired term of the lease as liquidated damages”
(clause 99(c) of the GTC).
[3]
It is further common cause that the vehicle
was supplied by Scania South Africa (Pty)
Ltd
as
recorded
on
the
transaction
schedule
and
tax
invoice
signed
by
the
respondent’s sole director
Kiranchand Sivraj, on 19 June 2017.
In this
document (annexure “FA2” to the founding affidavit) the
respondent confirmed as follows:
‘…
that
it understands that repair and maintenance will be the obligation of
Scania South Africa (Pty) Ltd (registration number 1995/001275/07)
…and that it shall not be entitled to withhold any payments
due to Scania as a consequence of any dispute with Scania South
Africa (Pty) Ltd.’
The respondent received
delivery of the vehicle on 21 June 2017 and proceeded to trade with
the vehicle.
[4]
It is also common cause that the respondent
failed to effect payments timeously and in terms of the agreement,
specifically the
instalments for December 2018 and January 2019. On
the instructions of the applicant, its attorneys dispatched an email
dated
11
January
2019,
requesting
the
respondent
to
pay
the
arrear
amount
of R52 679.46 and to furnish its bank
details and certain other financial information. The applicant’s
attorney dispatched
a further email on 28 January 2019 requesting
payment of the arrear amount of R99 444.94 and the financial
information it had requested,
which the respondent had failed to
furnish. The respondent responded to the aforesaid email by an email
dated 30 January 2019,
in which it admitted that it was unable to pay
the arrears for those two months and requested a reduction in the
monthly payments
as set out in the agreement. It also complained that
the vehicle was beset with poor performance and defects which
affected its
ability to comply with its payment obligations. At that
date, the respondent was in default of its obligations under the
agreement
and had failed to remedy its breaches by failing to pay the
arrear amounts and to furnish the financial information reflecting
the current financial status of the respondent, as it was obliged to
under clause 24 of the GTC.
[5]
Relying on this default and the
respondent’s email dated 30 January 2019, the applicant issued
a notice of termination of
the agreement dated 30 January 2019, in
which it demanded return of the vehicle. The amount owing was
reflected on the termination
notice as R1 474 735.62. The applicant’s
credit risk manager subsequently issued a certificate of balance
dated 10 May 2019,
certifying that the respondent was indebted to the
applicant in the sum of R1 474 735.62 together with interest thereon
to date
of final payment.
[6]
Subsequently,
the statutory demand in terms of s 345(1)
(a)
of
the Companies Act
[1]
(“the
Act”) dated 7 October 2020 was served by the Sheriff on the
respondent at its registered address by being placed
in the post box
on the property. The notice recorded the respondent’s
indebtedness as being the sum of R1 628 356.87, ‘being
the
outstanding amount in respect of the unexpired term of the now
terminated financial lease agreement…’. Relying
on s
344
(f)
read
with ss 345(1)
(a)
and
(c)
of
the Act, on 20 November 2020 the applicant launched the application
to place the respondent under provisional liquidation, averring
that
the respondent is unable to pay its debts as when such debts fall due
and that the respondent is insolvent. The application
was served on
the respondent at its registered address on 3 December 2020.
## Litigation history
Litigation history
[7]
The
respondent opposed the application. In its answering affidavit, it
averred firstly that the service of the s 345(1)
(a)
notice
was non-compliant with the rules for service of the notice and
secondly that the applicant had failed to comply with the
provisions
of ss 129(1) and 131 of the National Credit Act (“the NCA”).
[2]
The
third ground of opposition was that the creditor’s claim must
be a liquidated debt viz that the amount must be fixed and
determined. The respondent pointed out that differing amounts had
been claimed as owing by the respondent in the certificate of
balance
dated 10 May 2019, the s 345(1)
(a)
notice
dated 7 October 2020, the letter dated 28 January 2019 from the
applicant’s attorneys recording the arrears, and the
statement
dated 31 January 2019. Relying on these ‘discrepancies’,
the respondent asserted that it had established
that the debt was not
a liquidated debt and not due and payable, and that the application
for liquidation must fail.
[8]
In its replying affidavit, the applicant
submitted that the service had been properly effected by the Sheriff
as provided for in
the Uniform rules, that the registered address was
not disputed by the respondent, and that the NCA was not applicable
to the agreement.
The applicant furnished an updated certificate of
balance dated 27 July 2021, which recorded the indebtedness of the
respondent
as being the amount R783 440.40. The applicant submitted
that the respondent had admitted in writing that it is indebted to
the
applicant in a sum not less than R100, that the balance due has
not been paid and that the respondent had presented no credible
evidence that it was able to pay its debts as and when they arise or
the amount that had become payable upon the lawful termination
of the
agreement.
[9]
On 28 October 2021 Shapiro AJ issued the
order placing the respondent under provisional liquidation, with a
return date of 4 February
2022. On 4 February 2022 the rule nisi was
extended to 14 March 2022, with the respondent directed to deliver a
further answering
affidavit by 11 February 2022 and to pay the wasted
costs occasioned by the adjournment. The respondent however only
delivered
its answering affidavit on 2 March 2022, which resulted in
the matter being adjourned to 26 April 2022 with the rule extended to
that date.
[10]
The respondent only delivered its further
answering affidavit (“FAA”) deposed to on 2 March 2022,
in which it raised
new grounds of opposition to a final liquidation
order, although it alleged that it was still disputing the
applicant’s claim
on bona fide and reasonable grounds. The
applicant filed a replying affidavit in which it responded to the
issues raised by the
respondent.
[11]
The matter was then argued on 14 March 2023
before me by Mr
Pitman
who
appeared for the applicant, and Mr
Aboobaker
SC
, assisted by Mr
Houston
,
who appeared for the respondent, whereafter I reserved judgment.
Before the judgment could be delivered, on 17 May 2023, the
respondent delivered an application to file a further affidavit. This
led to a flurry of correspondence which delayed the finalisation
of
the matter. Eventually pursuant to my directions, the applicant filed
an opposing affidavit, and the respondent delivered its
reply. The
application to file a further affidavit was argued on 22 September
2023, and judgment reserved.
## Application to file a
further affidavit
Application to file a
further affidavit
[12]
It appears appropriate to deal at this
stage with the application to file a further affidavit on 17 May 2023
by the respondent,
approximately two months after the matter was
argued and judgment reserved. The application was opposed by the
applicant. The parties
are referred to as they are in the main
application. It is also appropriate to note that the respondent had
filed a FAA after the
granting of the provisional order without the
leave of the court. It merely submitted that the provisional order,
which called
upon it to show cause on the return date as to why a
final order should not be granted, entitled it as a matter of right
to deliver
a FAA. Leave was requested from the court to deliver the
affidavit in the interests of justice, in the event that the
respondent
was wrong.
[13]
On receipt of the FAA, the applicant filed
a further replying affidavit (“FRA”) in which it took
issue not with the
filing of the FAA per se but with the late filing
thereof without an application for condonation. The applicant
thereafter responded
to the issues raised in the FAA. When the matter
served before me on 14 March 2023, I deemed it expedient to allow the
further
affidavits, despite the lack of an application for
condonation, especially as there was no material prejudice to the
applicant
who had already delivered a FRA, and it appeared to be in
the interests of justice to allow the parties to ventilate the issues
more fully. The matter was thereafter argued at some length by Mr
Aboobaker
in
particular.
[14]
As already noted the application to file a
FAA arrived some two months later, and was eventually heard on 22
September 2023, by
which stage I had already retired from active
service. Both parties contributed to the delay before the papers were
complete and
a date for the application to be heard could be
arranged.
[15]
The salient reasons offered by the
respondent as to why it should be permitted to file a third affidavit
at this stage were prefaced
by the following somewhat surprising
statements:
‘
8.
At the hearing of the
24
th
February 2023, it became apparent for the first time
during the course of argument that the possibility of the court
granting a
final liquidation order against the Respondent could not
be ruled out…
…
10.
However, the Respondent
wishes to take no chances and is not prepared to take the risk,
however small, that a liquidation order
may be granted…
…
12.
Given this dilemma, I
have been advised by my legal advisors that a liquidation order can
be avoided if the Respondent tenders payment
to the Applicant on a
without prejudice basis and subject to the Respondent’s right
to reclaim return of the monies paid
if the liquidation order is
refused on the merits whether in this court or an appeal.
13.
…
The
tender of payment as described in paragraph 12 hereof …has the
effect of precluding the court from granting an order
of liquidation.
14.
I am advised that once
provision has been made for the payment of the debt claimed by the
Applicant in this way, there is very little
room for a liquidation
order to be granted.
15.
Clearly, what the
Applicant is trying to do is enforce payment of the debt which it
alleges is due to it. Once the debt is discharged,
the liquidation
order, I respectfully submit, cannot be granted.’
[16]
These convoluted submissions are arrogant
and, in my view, undermine the assertion by the respondent that it is
bona fide disputing
its indebtedness to the applicant. I am further
compelled to note my displeasure at the following statements by the
respondent
in its affidavit:
‘
43.
Furthermore, the fact
that the court even entertained the possibility of liquidating the
Respondent in the course of argument compelled
the Respondent to take
the most cautious approach available. Prior to that hearing, the
legal representatives of the Respondent
were of the view, for various
reasons advanced in the Heads of Argument submitted on behalf of the
Respondent and in the affidavits
before the court that a proper case
had not been made out for a liquidation order against the
Respondent.’
[17]
During argument I engaged with both
counsel, and more specifically on submissions advanced by them which
required clarification
and the weight of authority, as is incumbent
on a presiding judge. To this end, I engaged at some length with Mr
Aboobaker
on
his contention that the applicant’s claim was not a liquid
claim as contemplated
by
the
deeming
provisions
of
s
345(1)
(a)
of
the
Act,
and
that
as
the applicant had therefore not established
a debt due thereby discharging the onus on it, there was no onus on
the respondent to
show that it disputed the applicant’s claim
on bona fide and reasonable grounds. To criticize the court for
having ‘even
entertained the possibility of liquidating the
respondent’ is not merely unwarranted but arrogant,
disrespectful and reprehensible
verging on contempt for the court. In
my view an apology for such disrespect ought to have been made to the
court, prior to the
commencement of address on the merits.
[18]
The
respondent asserts further that the loan advanced by applicant is
void and unenforceable as it contravenes “s 83 of the
Credit
Agreements Act 25 of 2004”.
[3]
The respondent also invokes the defence of reckless credit as
contemplated in s 80(1)
(a)
or
(b)
of
the NCA.
[19]
In its answering affidavit, the applicant
contends that the respondent is attempting to change its earlier
versions and that it
does not explain why the application will not be
prejudicial to the applicant, particularly as it has delayed the
finalisation
of the liquidation proceedings. The applicant also
points out that the information the respondent declares is new
evidence existed
prior to the matter being argued on 14 March 2023.
The applicant thereafter proceeds to respond to the issues raised by
the respondent.
## Legal principles
Legal principles
[20]
In
Hano
Trading CC v JR 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another
[4]
the Supreme Court of Appeal (‘the SCA’) held:
‘
[10]
… Should a litigant decide to proceed by way of application,
rule 6 of the Uniform Rules of Court applies. This rule
sets out the
sequence and timing for the filing of the affidavits by the
respective parties. An advantage inherent in application
proceedings,
even if opposed, is that it can lead to a speedy and efficient
adjudication and resolution of the disputes between
parties. Unlike
actions, in application proceedings the affidavits take the place not
only of the pleadings, but also of the essential
evidence which would
be led at a trial. It is accepted that the affidavits are limited to
three sets.
It
follows thus that great care must be taken to fully set out the case
of a party on whose behalf an affidavit is filed. It is
therefore not
surprising that rule 6(5)
(e)
provides
that further affidavits may only be allowed at the discretion of the
court.
[11]
Rule 6(5)
(e)
establishes clearly that the filing of
further affidavits is only permitted with the indulgence of the
court. A court, as arbiter,
has the sole discretion whether to allow
the affidavits or not. A court will only exercise its discretion in
this regard where
there is good reason for doing so.
[12]
This court stated in
James
Brown & Hamer (Pty) Ltd (Previously named Gilbert Hamer & Co
Ltd) v Simmons NO
1963 (4) SA 656
(A)
at 660D – H that:
“
It
is in the interests of the administration of justice that the well
known and well established general rules regarding the number
of sets
and the proper sequence of affidavits in motion proceedings should
ordinarily be observed. That is not to say that those
general rules
must always be rigidly applied: some flexibility, controlled by the
presiding Judge exercising his discretion in
relation to the facts of
the case before him, must necessarily also be permitted. Where, as in
the present case, an affidavit is
tendered in motion proceedings both
late and out of its ordinary sequence, the party tendering it is
seeking not a right, but an
indulgence from the Court: he must both
advance his explanation of why the affidavit is out of time and
satisfy the Court that,
although the
affidavit is late, it should, having regard
to all the circumstances of the case, nevertheless be received.
Attempted definition
of the ambit of a discretion is neither easy nor
desirable.
…
the adequacy or otherwise of the
explanation for the late tendering of the affidavit will always be an
important factor in the enquiry.”’
(Footnotes and further
citations omitted.)
[21]
In
Afric
Oil (Pty) Ltd v Ramadaan
Investments
CC
,
[5]
Moleko J stated:
‘
Normally
in motion proceedings three sets of affidavits are allowed and no
further affidavits may be filed without leave of Court.
Such leave is
in the discretion of the Court and such discretion is to be exercised
judicially upon consideration of the facts
in each case.
In Herbstein and Van
Winsen
Civil Practice of the Supreme Court of South Africa
at
359 it is stated that leave of Court will only be granted in special
circumstances or if the Court considers such a course advisable.
Special circumstances exist where something unexpected or something
new emerges from applicant's replying affidavit. There must
be a
satisfactory explanation which negatives
mala fide
as to the
reason why the information was not placed before the court at an
earlier stage.’
[22]
In
Dawood
v Mahomed
[6]
the court held:
‘
Whilst
in no way seeking to detract from the necessity for rules and the
proper observance thereof it remains the fundamental task
of the
Court to attempt to adjudicate upon the real issues between the
parties rather than to allow itself to be diverted from
that course
by technicalities which would have the effect of precluding a full
ascertainment of all facts relevant to the issues
in dispute.’
## Discussion
Discussion
[23]
It is necessary to note that there was no
objection by the parties or their counsel to the court ruling on this
application and
delivering judgment in the main application at the
same time, because there would be no prejudice to the applicant even
if the
application were to be granted and the further (third)
affidavit be allowed, as the applicant had responded in detail to
issues
raised therein. I also remained mindful that the respondent
already had been afforded the indulgence of the FAA being allowed,
and that the respondent could have requested the information
pertaining to the alleged remaining indebtedness long before it
allegedly
became conscious of the ‘possibility’ that the
final liquidation order may be granted.
[24]
Nevertheless, having perused the
application papers and considered the arguments advanced by counsel,
and exercising my discretion
judicially in the light of the comments
in
Dawood v Mohamed
quoted
above, I have determined that it is in the interests of both parties
and in the interests of justice that the third set of
affidavits be
allowed. In my view, the explanation offered by the applicant as to
how the amount of R783 440.40 was computed and
content of the
documents annexed to the respondent’s affidavit which support
the explanation, are pertinent to the onus that
the applicant has to
discharge, and also to the argument advanced on behalf of the
respondent that the debt was illiquid and not
easily ascertainable. I
shall revert to the significance of the contents of these affidavits
is in due course.
## The law and legal
principles relevant to an application for a final winding-up
The law and legal
principles relevant to an application for a final winding-up
[25]
The applicant relies on s 344
(f)
of the Act read with s 345(1)
(a)
and
(c)
thereof. Section 344
(f)
of the Act states that a company may be
wound up by the court if ‘the company is unable to pay its
debts as described in section
345’. Section 345(1) sets out
three circumstances in which a company ‘shall be deemed to be
unable to pay its debts’.
The applicant relies on the
respondent’s non-payment in response to a statutory demand and
actual or proven inability to
pay debts. The relevant portions of s
345(1) of the Act read:
‘
(1)
a company or body shall be deemed to be unable to pay its debts if-
(a)
a creditor, be cession or otherwise, to
whom the company is indebted in a sum not less than one hundred rand
then due-
(i)
has served on the company, by leaving the
same at its registered office, a demand requiring the company to pay
the sum so due;
(ii)
...
and the company or body
corporate has for three weeks thereafter neglected to pay the sum, or
to secure or compound for it to the
reasonable satisfaction of the
creditor; or
…
(c)
it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that
the company is unable to pay its debts.
(2) In
determining for the purpose of subsection (1) whether a company is
unable to pay its debts, the Court shall take
into account the
contingent and prospective liabilities of the company.’
[26]
For
the
purposes
of
s
344
(f)
of
the
Act,
it
is
not
necessary
to
prove
actual
insolvency. In
Standard
Bank of South Africa v R-Bay Logistics CC,
[7]
the
court held:
‘
[27]
…if there is evidence that the respondent company is
commercially insolvent (ie cannot pay its debts when they fall
due)
that is enough for a court to find that the required case under s
344
(f)
has
been proved…’
Section
345(1)
(a)
provides
that the claim must be ‘then due’, which means it must be
‘due and payable’.
[8]
[27]
Section
345(1) of the Act is referred to as ‘the deeming provision’
because it provides that a company shall be deemed
to be unable to
pay its debts on non- payment in response to the statutory demand.
However, the deeming provision is rebuttable.
[9]
A
company should not be deemed to be unable to pay its debts merely
because a proven claim has not been paid or secured. As stated
by
Rogers J in
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and Another
:
[10]
‘
[15]
…As to statutory demand, a company is not deemed to be unable
to pay its debts merely because an established claim has
not been
paid or secured; what must be shown is that the company has
“neglected” to pay or secure the claim. The English
cases
hold that the word “neglected” is not apt to describe a
refusal to pay where the claim is bona fide disputed
on some
substantial ground.’
[28]
A
company which is commercially deemed to be insolvent is not barred
from raising a defence if it is bona fide and based on reasonable
grounds. Therefore, despite the deeming provision, evidence that the
company is commercially solvent may sustain the argument that
the
company’s failure to pay is attributable to a bona fide and
genuine dispute of the claim, even though the court may find
that the
grounds of dispute are ill-founded. In
Orestisolve
[11]
Rogers
J held that the deeming effect may be neutralised by the company's
refusal to make payment in response to statutory demand,
particularly
in conjunction with other circumstances, providing a basis for the
court to exercise its discretion against liquidation.
[29]
Whether
a company is able or not to pay its debts, the liquidation
proceedings are not meant for the enforcement of a debt that
the
company disputes on bona fide and reasonable grounds (‘the
Badenhorst
rule’).
[12]
When
a provisional order is sought, if the applicant establishes the
indebtedness of the company prima facie, the onus is on
the
company
to
show
that
it
is
bona
fide
disputed
on
reasonable
grounds.
[13]
However when a final
order is sought, the same test cannot be applied. As Rogers J held in
Orestisolve
:
‘
[9]
The test for a final order of liquidation
is different. The applicant must establish its case on a balance of
probabilities. Where
the facts are disputed, the court is not
permitted to determine the balance of probabilities on the affidavits
but must instead
apply the
Plascon-Evans
rule…
[10]
The difference in approach to factual
disputes at the provisional and final stages appears to me to have
implications for the
Badenhorst
rule.
If there are genuine disputes of fact regarding the existence of the
applicant’s claim at the final stage, the applicant
will fail
on ordinary principles unless it can persuade the court to refer the
matter to oral evidence. The court cannot, at the
final stage, cast
an onus on the respondent of proving that the debt is bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds merely because
the balance of
probabilities on the affidavits favours the applicant…
[11]
If, on the other hand, and with due regard
to the application of the
Plascon-Evans
rule, the court is satisfied at the
final stage that there is no genuine factual dispute regarding the
existence of the applicant’s
claim, there seems to be limited
scope for finding that the debt is nevertheless bona fide disputed on
reasonable grounds…’
[30]
Rogers J stated further:
‘
[67]
…Bona fides is a question of fact. At the stage of a final
order, it must be assessed in accordance with the
Plascon-Evans
rule. Even though the onus on a
particular issue in motion proceedings might rest on the respondent,
this does not reverse the operation
of the
Plascon-
Evans
rule…And bona fides, in
the context of the
Badenhorst
rule,
does not in my view require that the company should hold a belief
that at trial its defence to the claim would definitely
succeed or
even be more likely than not to succeed. It would be sufficient, I
think, that the company genuinely wishes to contest
the claim and
believes it has reasonable prospects of success.’
[31]
The
Plascon-Evans
rule
states:
[14]
‘
where
an applicant who seeks final relief on motion must, in the event of
conflict, accept the version set up by his opponent unless
the
latter’s allegations are, in the opinion of the court, not such
as to raise a real, genuine or bona fide dispute of fact
or are so
far-fetched or clearly untenable that the court is justified in
rejecting them merely on the papers.’
[32]
In
African
Congress for Transformation v Electoral Commission of South Africa
and related matters
[15]
the
Constitutional Court per Majiedt J writing for the majority,
confirmed that:
‘
[93]
The approach to resolve disputes of fact on
the papers is well-established. Elaborating on the well-known
Plascon-Evans
approach,
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Wightman
stated-
“
A
real, genuine and
bona
fide
dispute of fact can exist only where the court is satisfied that the
party who purports to raise the dispute has in his affidavit
seriously and unambiguously addressed the fact said to be disputed.
There will of course be instances where a bare denial meets
the
requirement because there is no other way open to the disputing party
and nothing more can therefore be expected of him. But
even that may
not be sufficient if the fact averred lies purely within the
knowledge of the averring party and no basis is laid
for disputing
the veracity or accuracy of the averment. When the facts averred are
such that the disputing party must necessarily
possess knowledge of
them and be able to provide an answer (or countervailing evidence) if
they be not true or accurate but, instead
of doing so, rests his case
on a bare or ambiguous denial the court will generally have
difficulty in finding that the [
Plascon-Evans
]
test is satisfied.”
…
[95] Motion
proceedings are unsuitable to decide probabilities. In instances
where final relief is sought, motion proceedings
are aimed at
resolving issues of law based on common cause facts. And where
disputes of fact arise, absent a referral for oral
evidence, the
Plascon
- Evans
approach, as amplified in
Wightman,
must
be employed.’ (Footnotes omitted.)
[33]
Therefore
if the court finds that a genuine dispute of fact exists regarding
the existence of the applicant's claim at a final liquidation
stage,
and that the respondent disputes liability on bona fide and
reasonable grounds, a final winding-up order should be refused.
[16]
Finally, irrespective of the ground upon which an application for
winding- up is brought, the court has a discretion whether or
not to
grant a winding-up order. The court’s discretion has to be
exercised judicially mindful of its inherent jurisdiction
to prevent
abuse of its processes.
[34]
A
final winding-up order may be refused if special circumstances exist;
such special circumstances include the solvency of the company.
Where
a company has not discharged its debts, the court exercises a narrow
discretion when determining a liquidation application.
In
Boschpoort
Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Ltd
[17]
the
SCA held:
‘
[17]
That a company's commercial insolvency is a
ground that will justify an order for its liquidation has been a
reality of law which
has served us well through the passage of time.
The reasons are not hard to
find:
the valuation of assets, other than cash, is a notoriously elastic
and often highly subjective one; the liquidity of assets
is often
more viscous than recalcitrant debtors would have a court believe;
more often than not, creditors do not have knowledge
of the assets of
a company that owes them money - and cannot be expected to have;
and
courts
are more
comfortable with
readily
determinable
and
objective
tests
such as whether a company is able to meet
its current liabilities than with abstruse economic exercises as to
the valuation of a
company’s assets…’ (Footnote
omitted.)
[35]
Similarly
in
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
,
[18]
the
SCA reiterated the principle that, ‘generally speaking, an
unpaid creditor has a right,
ex
debito justitiae
,
to a winding-up order against the respondent company that has not
discharged that debt’
[19]
and that ‘in practice, the discretion of a court to refuse to
grant a winding-up order where an unpaid creditor applies therefor
is
a “very narrow one” that is rarely exercised and then in
special or unusual circumstances only’.
[20]
The
court held further that ‘…the discretion to refuse a
winding-up order where it is common cause that the respondent
has not
paid an admitted debt is, notwithstanding a counterclaim, a narrow
and not a broad one’.
[21]
## Discussion
Discussion
[36]
Deriving from the legal principles as set
out above, the main issues for determination by this court are
whether the applicant’s
claim is for a liquidated sum and
whether the respondent has raised genuine disputes of fact that
undermine the applicant’s
claim of its indebtedness.
### Is the applicant’s
claim a liquidated debt?
Is the applicant’s
claim a liquidated debt?
[37]
Mr
Aboobaker
contended that the applicant cannot
rely on the provisions of s 345(1)
(a)
of
the Act as its claim is not for a liquidated sum. It is not in
dispute that ‘then due’ as contemplated in s 345(1)
(a)
and ‘due and payable’ can
only be in respect of a liquid claim or a liquidated amount of money.
The respondent has raised
and developed the same contention in all
three of its affidavits. The applicant has responded in each of its
affidavits to the
respondent’s contentions and persisted that
the claim is not only a liquidated debt, but it is a creditor of the
respondent
in an amount in excess of R100 and therefore has the
locus
standi
to bring liquidation
proceedings.
[38]
The relevant legal principles and test to
be applied in the determination of whether a claim is for a
liquidated debt are as follows:
(a)
In
Fatti’s
Engineering Co (Pty) Ltd v Vendick Spares (Pty) Ltd
[22]
Boshoff J held that:
‘
A
debt must be liquid in the sense that it is based on a liquid
document or is admitted or its money value has been ascertained,
or
in the sense that it is capable of prompt ascertainment. The decision
as to whether a debt is capable of speedy ascertainment
is a matter
left to the discretion of the individual Judge in each particular
case.’
(b)
In
Botha
v W Swanson and Company (Pty) Ltd
[23]
Corbett J describes the test for liquidity of a claim as follows:
‘
only
claims which are so expressed that the ascertainment of the amount is
a mere matter of calculation. To this should, naturally,
be added
claims based upon an obligation to pay an agreed sum of money.’
(c)
In
determining the issue of liquidity, the court must consider the
submissions in the affidavits of both parties.
[24]
If,
from the defence disclosed, it appears to the court that proof of the
claim may be protracted and difficult rather than prompt,
this is a
factor which may be taken into account in deciding whether or not a
claim is liquidated.
[25]
[39]
In its founding affidavit, the applicant
stated that the respondent was indebted to it in the amount of R1 474
735.62 as at 30 January
2019 in respect of the unexpired term of the
terminated agreement.
It
is not in dispute that at that date the vehicle had not yet been
recovered by the applicant nor had it been sold to mitigate
the
respondent’s indebtedness. The respondent contended that when
the vehicle was recovered in June 2019, its value was R1
230 940.26.
It alleged that the applicant had retained possession of the vehicle
and had not leased or sold it and credited any
income or proceeds to
the respondent’s account. It alleged further that the vehicle
has been used by ‘unknown third
parties’ which would have
generated an income, and there had been no accounting by the
applicant in respect thereof. The
respondent did not provide a
valuation of the vehicle, nor did it provide any admissible evidence
or corroboration for its allegations
of unauthorised use, or any
calculations in an endeavour to demonstrate that the applicant’s
claim was inflated. Further
it alleged that there was no provision
for the calculation of damages in the agreement and therefore the
claim was not a liquidated
amount.
[40]
In its replying affidavit, the applicant
responded that it was only upon the finalisation of the proceedings
in the Verulam Magistrates’
Court, pending which the vehicle
was in storage, that the vehicle was sold and the proceeds applied to
the amount owing by the
respondent. The updated certificate of
balance dated 27 July 2021, recorded the indebtedness of the
respondent as being the amount
R783 440.40. The applicant pertinently
submitted that the respondent had admitted in writing that it is
indebted to the applicant
in a sum not less than R100, that the
balance due has not been paid and that the respondent had presented
no credible evidence,
such as bank or financial statements or
management accounts, that it was able to pay its debts as and when
they arise or the amount
that had become payable upon the lawful
termination of the agreement. At this stage the applicant did not
provide any calculations
or breakdown as to how the reduced claim had
been calculated. However, clause 81 of the GTC provides for the
market valuation of
the goods by a person appointed at the discretion
of the applicant. The clause also provides that the applicant may
‘sell
or lease the Goods on such terms and conditions as the
Lessor deems fit and the net amount realised on such sale shall be
deemed
to be the market value of the Goods at the date of such sale’.
[41]
In its FAA deposed to on 2 March 2022, the
respondent states that the true nature of the applicant’s claim
is ‘contractual
damages’ and the reliance on a
certificate of balance to assess the applicant’s claim is
inappropriate. Clause 80 of
the GTC provides that a certificate of
indebtedness by a duly authorised representative of the applicant,
shall be prima facie
evidence of the respondent’s indebtedness
to the applicant for the purpose of any legal proceedings that may be
instituted
against the respondent.
The
respondent repeats its allegations about the sale of the vehicle and
the use of the vehicle, and again fails to provide any
corroboration
therefor.
[42]
In its reply the applicant elucidates on
how the indebtedness of the respondent was calculated, which included
both the arrears
at date of cancellation as well the amount due for
the unexpired term of the agreement. It states that the details of
the sale
of the vehicle on 3 June 2019 for an amount of R1 230 940.29
to Scania South Africa are reflected on the VAT invoice which is
annexed
to the respondent’s affidavit as annexure “RA7”.
The proceeds of the sale were credited to the respondent’s
account, leaving a balance of R783 440.40 (as recorded in the
certificate of balance dated 27 July 2021). The applicant contends
that the respondent remains indebted to it despite the mitigation
through the application of the proceeds of the sale.
[43]
In its third affidavit, the respondent
states that it deemed it necessary to deliver a further affidavit in
order to place evidence
before the court which establishes that the
debt claimed by the applicant is illiquid and not capable of
ascertainment. It alleges
that consequently it is unable to discharge
the debt as claimed by the applicant as the amount claimed has been
exaggerated and
incorrectly calculated. The respondent relies on the
correspondence between the respective attorneys of the parties
annexed to
its affidavit to assert that the claim is illiquid.
[44]
As noted above, the applicant in its
opposing affidavit, points out that the information the respondent
declares is new evidence,
existed prior to the matter being argued on
14 March 2023. In response to the allegations about the applicant’s
inability
to determine the amount still owed by the respondent, the
applicant sets out in detail how the amount of R783 440.40 is arrived
at. The applicant admits that it had erred in stating that the
vehicle had been sold for R1 230 940.29 as reflected in annexure
“RA7”
in
its
second
replying
affidavit.
The
vehicle
had
been
sold
for
R720
000
(excluding VAT) and the correct selling price was in fact credited to
the respondent’s account. This was reflected in
the
reconciliation provided to the respondent’s attorneys under
cover of the letter dated 5 April 2023 from the applicant’s
attorneys, which also provided the statements and calculations which
established that the indebtedness of the respondent was the
sum of
R783 440.40, as reflected in the certificate of balance dated 27 July
2021 (annexure “RA1”).
[45]
The
applicant explains that annexure “RA7” was a document
that the applicant was obliged to prepare in terms of s 20(3)
of the
Value-Added Tax Act (“VAT Act”),
[26]
which reflects the value of the outstanding balance plus VAT on the
date of repossession. In terms of the VAT Act this document
is deemed
to be a tax invoice supplied by the respondent, and because the
agreement was terminated, the applicant was obliged to
prepare the
document to account to the Receiver of Revenue for the VAT due in
respect of the unexpired term of the terminated lease.
[46]
In
Alton
Coach Africa CC v Datcentre Motors (Pty) Ltd t/a CMH Commercial
[27]
Mr
Aboobaker
successfully
advanced a similar argument before Ndlovu J, who found that the claim
in that matter was not “easily determinable”
and
“therefore not a claim for a liquidated amount sounding in
money”.
[28]
The
facts in this matter are however clearly distinguishable. Having
considered the documents which the respondent attached to its
third
affidavit, the founding documents, and the applicant’s error in
respect of the selling price of the vehicle, which
did not alter the
amount in which the respondent remains indebted to the applicant per
the amended certificate of balance, I am
satisfied that the amount of
claim is properly vouched and substantiated.
[47]
I have little doubt that the claim is a
liquidated debt sounding in money – the agreement sets out all
the costs to be included
in the calculation of the claim, including
insurance, recovery costs, the value of the unexpired term of the
lease as well as the
arrears and interest to date of payment.
Therefore, the prompt ascertainment of the
debt cannot be difficult to achieve. In the event that the respondent
required the details
of how the amount of R783 440.40 was computed it
had ample opportunity to query and clarify any discrepancies, alleged
or real,
with the applicant through its attorneys much earlier than
it did.
[48]
In my view, it is apparent that when the
respondent became concerned about the possibility that the court may
not agree with its
counsel that the claim was not a liquidated claim,
it called for the balance and then set about disputing the
calculations despite
the documents that the applicant supplied and
relied on to substantiate its claim. This was clearly intended to
sustain its contention
that the debt was not capable of prompt
ascertainment and therefore the applicant’s claim was illiquid.
In my view the respondent
deliberately disputes the calculations
without providing a sound basis therefor or providing sound and
credible calculations of
its own to also sustain its argument that
the claim is not capable of easy ascertainment. I am satisfied that
the ascertainment
of the applicant’s debt is merely a matter of
calculation.
[49]
The respondent’s allegation that the
plaintiff is trying to recover ‘contractual damages’ also
seems intended
to persuade the court that the claim is not liquidated
as the term ‘damages’ does not usually denote a
liquidated sum
of money. However, I am unable to find any genuine
disputes of fact on the issue of whether the claim is liquid in the
aforesaid
affidavits. I am unmoved by the respondent’s strategy
and am satisfied that the applicant has shown clearly that the debt
is liquid and due and payable. Even if the legal costs component of
the claim reflected in the letter dated 5 April 2023 from the
applicant’s attorneys is susceptible to taxation, the remaining
amount is vastly in excess of R100.
In
my view the liquidity of the claim is disputed
mala
fide,
and the allegations made by the
respondent must be rejected as they are spurious and undermine its
assertion that it is disputing
the claim on bona fide and reasonable
grounds. I am therefore satisfied that the applicant’s claim is
for a liquidated sum
of money and that the applicant properly relies
on s 345(1)
(a)
of
the Act to assert its claim.
### Is the claim disputed
bona fide and on reasonable grounds?
Is the claim disputed
bona fide and on reasonable grounds?
[50]
I turn now to the further disputes in the
three sets of affidavits. The applicant has annexed to the founding
affidavit the contractual
documents which constituted the agreement
which the parties concluded, describing it as ‘a lease
agreement in terms of which
the respondent leased a vehicle from the
applicant’. The respondent does not dispute the nature of the
agreement until his
third answering affidavit when he describes the
agreement as a loan agreement. The deponent to the respondent’s
affidavit
and its sole shareholder, Mr Sivraj, is on his own version,
an experienced businessman who in the course of his business utilises
vehicles similar to that which he received from the applicant. The
Windeed Company Report (“FA1”) indicates he commenced
business in 2011. Although Mr Sivraj does not state what the nature
of the agreements were with the suppliers and/or financiers
of the
other vehicles, he must nevertheless be alive to the obligations he
undertook when he entered into the agreement with the
applicant. He
signed all the transactional documents which set out clearly that the
agreement is a financial lease. In fact, at
the top of the first
document, which is the transaction schedule and tax invoice, the
nature of the agreement is reflected as ‘Financial
lease’.
[51]
The respondent’s further assertion
that the loan advanced by applicant is void and unenforceable as it
contravenes s 83 of
the Credit Agreements Act, is properly countered
by the applicant when it points out that the allegations in respect
of the ‘Credit
Agreements Act’ appear to be unfounded and
unsupported and therefore should be disregarded. In fact there is no
proper reliance
on legislation that may be considered relevant to the
respondent’s defence.
[52]
The respondent’s allegation in its
first affidavit that the applicant failed to comply with the NCA
which was clearly ill-founded.
The NCA only comes up again in its
third affidavit when it invokes the defence of reckless credit as
contemplated in s 80(1)
(a)
or
(b)
of the
NCA. Despite Mr
Aboobaker’s
argument that even if the NCA is not
applicable to the agreement, the applicant can still be held
accountable for reckless lending,
I remain unpersuaded. The
respondent, through Mr Sivraj, was fully apprised of its obligations,
including its payment obligations
and the consequences of default and
material breach of the agreement. In signing the agreement
voluntarily and without coercion
(none is alleged), he accepted
liability for compliance with the respondent’s obligations.
[53]
It is common cause that the respondent
breached the agreement when it failed to pay the December 2028 and
January 2019 instalments,
and subsequently informed the applicant
that it could not pay the monthly instalments. Although the
respondent seemed to suggest
that it had the resources and liquidity
to pay its debts but was unwilling to pay because of the disputes it
had raised, the respondent
did not resist the termination or return
the vehicle or provide the financial information the applicant had
requested and was entitled
to. Such information may have sustained
the respondent’s claim that it was able to pay its debts and/or
was solvent. The
respondent also did not return the vehicle as it was
obliged to, and the vehicle was repossessed almost six months later
after
the applicant resorted to litigation for its recovery.
[54]
The respondent also alleged that the
vehicle had been ‘fraught with problems’, and it was not
fit for the purposes for
which it was intended, thereby entitling the
respondent to claim damages.
It
complained further that when the problems had been reported to the
applicant, the applicant stated that Scania South Africa is
a
different entity. The applicant responded that it finances the
transactions through which Scania vehicles are leased by its clients.
It purchases the vehicles from Scania South Africa and leases them to
the clients. It also pointed out pertinently and correctly
that under
the GTC, the responded had waived any claim against the applicant in
connection with the vehicle and Scania South Africa
had provided the
respondent with warranties for the vehicle. Not only did Mr Sivraj
acknowledge by his signatures to the agreement
that the repairs would
be effected by Scania South Africa, the vehicle was in fact taken to
Scania South Africa for repairs. Further
with his acquired knowledge
of financing vehicles Mr Sivraj must know the difference between an
institution which leases a vehicle
and that which effects repairs,
and ought not to conflate the two, especially in the light of the
waiver he signed.
[55]
In the FAA deposed to on 2 March 2022 , Mr
Sivraj alleges that he was inveigled into purchasing the vehicle
through representations
made by employees of ‘Scania Trucking’,
(that is Scania South Africa) and the applicant. He claims that at
the time
he had not drawn any distinction between the two entities,
and that he was not aware when he signed the contract that the
applicant
was excluded from liability for any defects in the vehicle
although it had ‘purchased’ the vehicle from Scania South
Africa. He states that as the respondent was not the ‘original
purchaser of the vehicle’, the warranty was not available
to it
or applicable to the vehicle which had been purchased in turn from
the applicant.
However,
Mr Sivraj, confirms that the vehicle was left for repairs
with
Scania
South
Africa.
He
therefore
made
use
of
the
warranty
which
he denies was available to him. In my view
Mr Sivraj relies on a disingenuous and opportunistic interpretation
of the transactions
and the terms of the warranty, which he accepted.
[56]
The
respondent asserts that as the applicant failed to comply with its
contractual obligations, there was no obligation on it to
pay the
instalments due to the applicant. Further it has a substantial claim
for damages suffered as a result of its inability
to use the vehicle,
as well as from the impact of the provisional liquidation order. The
respondent claims further that the agreement
is effectively nullified
by a lack of consensus between the parties as it intended to enter
into an instalment sale agreement and
not a lease agreement. It
claims that it has a substantial defence under the provisions of s 61
of the Consumer Protection Act,
[29]
as
the vehicle was defective and unsafe. Again, there is nothing to
sustain these bare allegations, or to controvert the applicant’s
assertion of a valid financial lease agreement concluded with the
respondent.
[57]
The respondent finally avers that it has
never had a problem paying its debts and will produce “information
of its ability
to pay the amount outstanding to the applicant once
the debt has been determined”. This averment is contradictory
to its
own letter dated 30 January 2019 confirming that it was unable
to pay the arrears or the instalments as they fell due. Further the
respondent could have made a formal tender to show its bona fides and
solvency, neither of which has materialised.
[58]
In its reply the applicant points out
correctly that the respondent has failed to provide documents
supporting its averments in
respect of its financial status or the
other vehicles it allegedly purchased or the ‘inherent’
defects in the vehicle.
The applicant explains that it is a
registered credit provider and an in-house finance provider, and that
it acquired the vehicle
from Scania South Africa which is in the
business of importation and the manufacture of Scania vehicles. The
applicant and Scania
South Africa are therefore separate and distinct
entities with different directors although they have the same
international shareholders.
The applicant purchased the vehicle from
Scania South Africa and then leased it to the respondent, who was
fully apprised of and
understood the nature of the agreement viz that
it was a lease agreement. The applicant states that it has an
agreement with Scania
South Africa that vehicles which are returned
to it are sold to Scania South Africa which mitigates damages, and
the proceeds of
the sale are credited to the respondent.
[59]
I am unable to find any merit in the
respondent’s urging that the court should pierce the corporate
veil as the two entities
have an incestuous relationship as the
respondent has failed to provide anything more than allegations of
prejudice in support
of its argument.
I
am in agreement with Mr
Pitman
that
the agreement is a consensual one and the allegations of
unconstitutionality and
contra bonos
mores
are unfounded.
[60]
Finally, the admission of the third
affidavit has in fact redounded to the benefit of the applicant as it
provided the documents
to sustain the applicant’s claim of a
liquidated debt which is due and payable by the respondent. The
respondent on the other
hand has failed to secure or to tender the
amount claimed and has failed to provide any documents to establish
its commercial or
factual solvency even on a prima facie level.
[61]
In the premises I am satisfied that there
is no genuine dispute of fact and that the respondent is not
bona
fides
in its resistance to the
application. Its conduct is merely dilatory and has prejudiced the
rights of the applicant as a proven,
bona fide creditor to apply for
the final liquidation of the respondent.
## Order
Order
[62]
The following order is issued:
1.
The rule nisi issued on 28 October 2021 is
confirmed.
2.
The respondent is placed under final
liquidation.
3.
The costs of the application and the
interlocutory application are to be costs in the liquidation.
# MOODLEY J
MOODLEY J
#
# Case information:
Case information:
Dates
of hearing:
14 March 2023 and 22 September 2023
## Appearances
Appearances
For
the applicant:
Mr M
Pitman
Instructed
by:
Senekal
Simmonds Attorneys
19
Riley Road
Bedfordview
Telephone:
(011)
450 3084
Fax:
(011)
455 0888
Email:
devon@sesi.co.za
service@sesi.co.za
Reference:
D
Nordin/DH/S1633/MAT10708
c/o
Shepstone & Wylie
24
Richefond Circle
Ridgeside
Office Park
Umhlanga
Rocks
Durban
Telephone:
(031)
575 7000
Fax:
(031)
575 7503
Email:
djdv@wylie.co.za
Reference:
Dean
Joubert de Villiers
For
the respondent:
Mr TN
Aboobaker SC Mr BC Houston
Instructed
by:
Abdul
Shaikjee Attorneys Inc 180 Mahatma Gandhi Road Spinnaker Building
Office
6 6th Floor
Durban
Telephone:
(031)
332 2801
Email:
shaikjeeattorneys@telkomsa.net
Reference:
Abdul
Shaikjee
[1]
Companies
Act 61 of 1973.
[2]
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
[3]
Act
25 of 2004 is actually the Public Audit Act.
[4]
Hano
Trading CC v JR 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another
2013
(1) SA 161 (SCA).
[5]
Afric
Oil (Pty) Ltd v Ramadaan Investments CC
2004
(1) SA 35
(N) at 38H-39A.
[6]
Dawood
v Mahomed
1979
(2) SA 361
(D) at 365G-H.
[7]
Standard
Bank of South Africa v R-Bay Logistics CC
2013
(2) SA 295
(KZD).
[8]
GATX-Fuller
v Shepherd and Shepherd Inc
1984
(3) SA 48
(W) at 52H-I.
[9]
Ter
Beek v United Resources CC and Another
1997
(3) SA 315
(C) at 330H-331F.
[10]
Orestisolve
(Pty) Ltd t/a Essa Investments v NDFT Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and Another
2015
(4) SA 449 (WCC).
[11]
Ibid
paras 16 and 21.
[12]
Badenhorst
v Northern Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346
(T) at 347H-348C.
[13]
Hülse-Reutter
and Another v HEG Consulting Enterprises (Pty) Ltd (Lane and Fey NNO
Intervening)
1998 (2) SA 208
(C) at
218D-219C.
[14]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA) para 12
[15]
African
Congress
for
Transformation
v
Electoral
Commission
of
South
Africa
and
related
matters
2024
(8) BCLR 987 (CC).
[16]
Ter
Beek v United Resources CC and Another
1997
(3) SA 315
(C) at 329.
[17]
Boschpoort
Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Ltd
2014
(2) SA 518
(SCA).
[18]
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet (Pty) Ltd
2022
(1) SA 91 (SCA).
[19]
Ibid
para 12.
[20]
Ibid.
[21]
Ibid
para 13.
[22]
Fatti’s
Engineering Co (Pty) Ltd v Vendick Spares (Pty) Ltd
1962
(1) SA 736
(T) at 738E-F.
[23]
[2012]
ZANWHC 52
at para 26 “The Court must not look only at the
summons in deciding whether a claim is for a liquidated amount of
money
but the opposing affidavit must be taken into account.”
[24]
Botha
v W Swanson and Company (Pty) Ltd
1968
(2) PH F85 (CPD).
[25]
Ibid
at 544F-G.
[26]
Value-Added
Tax Act 89 of 1991.
[27]
Alton
Coach Africa CC v Datcentre Motors (Pty) Ltd t/a CMH Commercial
2007
(6) SA 154 (D).
[28]
Ibid
para 33.
[29]
Consumer
Protection Act 68 of 2008
.
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