Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 92South Africa
Scribante and Another v 47 Club Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (D6326/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 92 (5 December 2024)
Headnotes
judgment is refused.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Scribante and Another v 47 Club Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (D6326/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 92 (5 December 2024)
Scribante and Another v 47 Club Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (D6326/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 92 (5 December 2024)
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sino date 5 December 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NUMBER: D6326/2023
In
the matter between:
RENZO
ANGELO SCRIBANTE
FIRST PLAINTIFF
(Identity
number 7[...])
REMBROTHERS
(PTY) LTD
SECOND PLAINTIFF
(Registration
Number 2020/836629/07)
and
THE
47 CLUB TRADING (PTY) LTD
FIRST DEFENDANT
(Registration
Number 2020/836629/07)
KDE
HOLDINGS
SECOND DEFENDANT
(Registration
Number 2017/007830/07)
GIBSON
MTHEMBU
THIRD DEFENDANT
(Identity
Number 8[...])
ORDER
The
following order is made:
1.
The application for summary judgment is refused.
2.
The defendants are granted leave to defend the action.
3.
The costs of the summary judgment application are reserved for
decision by the trial court.
4.
This matter is, subject to the provisions of Practice Directive 21,
to be placed on the expedited
trial roll.
JUDGMENT
PLOOS
VAN AMSTEL AJ
[1]
This is an application for summary judgment. The first plaintiff and
the third defendant, both businessmen, were business
partners. The
genesis of this dispute is two oral loan agreements, in terms of
which funds were transferred from the second plaintiffs
bank account
into the first and second defendants' bank accounts respectively.
[2]
The plaintiffs in this matter claim the repayment of the sum of R2
216 211 20, together with interest and costs, against
the first and
third defendants (with the second defendant having been placed under
business rescue) jointly and severally, the
one paying the other to
be absolved.
[3]
Rule 32 was amended on 1 July 2019. It permits a summary judgment
application to be brought within 15 days after the defendant
has
filed a plea. The Full Court in
Raumix
Aggregates (Pty) Ltd v Richter Sand CC and Another, and Similar
Matters
[1]
held that the purpose of the amended rule 32 is to:
[2]
'...allow
the court to summarily dispense with actions that ought not to
proceed to trial because they do not raise a genuine triable
issue,
thereby conserving scarce judicial resources and improving access to
justice... '
[4]
Whilst the purpose of the amended rule 32 is to dispense with actions
that ought not to proceed to trial, and while undue
formalism in
procedural matters is always to be eschewed, however, as emphasised
by Corbett JA in
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
[3]
it is important in summary judgment applications that, 'in substance,
the plaintiff should do what is required of him by the Rule'.
[4]
[5]
The main issue for determination is whether the affidavit which
accompanies the application complies
with the requirements of Uniform
rule 32(2)(b). Rule 32(2)(b) reads as follows:-
'
(b)
The plaintiff shall, in the affidavit referred to in subrule (2)
(a),
verify the cause of action and the amount, if any, claimed, and
identify any point of law relied upon and the facts upon which the
plaintiff's claim is based, and explain briefly why the defence as
pleaded does not raise any issue for trial.'
[6]
The particulars of claim consists of three claims, each claim
containing a pleading in the alternative,
with the second claim
headed "IN THE ALTERNATIVE TO CLAIM 1" and the third claim
headed "IN THE ALTERNATIVE TO CLAIMS
1 AND 2". I am
required to detail the manner in which the plaintiffs have pleaded
their claim/s, the relevance of which will
be dealt with hereinunder.
[i]
Under claim 1, it is claimed that during or about August 2021, and at
Durban, the first
plaintiff and the first defendant, alternatively,
the third defendant, concluded an oral agreement in terms of which
the first
plaintiff agreed to loan and advance the sum of R750 000,00
to the first defendant, alternatively, the third defendant, and
during
or about September 2021 and at Durban, the first plaintiff and
the second defendant, alternatively, the third defendant concluded
an
oral agreement in terms of which the first plaintiff agreed to loan
and advance the sum of R2 000 000,00 to the second defendant
alternatively the third defendant;
[ii]
Under the heading of claim 2, it is claimed that during or about
August 2021 the second
plaintiff and the first defendant,
alternatively, the third defendant concluded an oral agreement in
terms of which the second
plaintiff agreed to loan and advance the
sum of R750 000,00 to the first defendant, alternatively, the third
defendant and during
or about September 2021 and at Durban, the first
plaintiff and the second defendant, alternatively, the third
defendant, concluded
an oral agreement in terms of which the first
plaintiff agreed to loan and advance the sum of R2 000 000,00 to the
second defendant,
alternatively, the third defendant;
[iii]
Under the heading of claim 3, it is claimed that during or about
August 2021 the first plaintiff,
alternatively, the second plaintiff
and the first and third defendants concluded an oral agreement in
terms of which the first
plaintiff, alternatively, the second
plaintiff agreed to loan and advance the sum of R750 000,00 to the
first and third defendants,
and during or about September 2021 and at
Durban, the first plaintiff and the second and third defendants
concluded an oral agreement
in terms of which the first plaintiff
agreed to loan and advance the sum of R2 000 000,00 to the second and
third defendant.
[7]
In summary, and to demonstrate the difficulty which arises from the
pleadings, the plaintiffs
plead that during or about August 2021, an
oral agreement was concluded between the first, alternatively, the
second plaintiff
and the first, alternatively, the third defendant,
alternatively, the first and third defendants, in terms of which the
first,
alternatively, the second plaintiff agreed to loan and advance
the sum of R750 000 to the first, alternatively, the third defendant,
alternatively, the first and the third defendants and that during or
about September 2021, an oral agreement was concluded between
the
first plaintiff and the second, alternatively, the third defendant,
alternatively, the second and the third defendants, in
terms of which
the first plaintiff agreed to loan and advance the sum of R2 000 000
to the second, alternatively, the third defendant,
alternatively, the
second and the third defendants.
[8]
Whilst it is not disputed that the sum of R750 000 which forms the
subject matter of the August
2021 oral agreement was earmarked for
the payment of the first defendant's supplier, and that the sum of R2
000 000 which forms
the subject matter of the September 2021 oral
agreement, was earmarked to settle the second defendant's debt or
liability to the
South African Revenue Services, it is unclear from
the particulars of claim, pleaded as aforementioned, which
plaintiff/s concluded
the August 2021 and/or the September 2021 oral
agreements with which defendant/s.
[9]
The affidavit in support of the application for summary judgment,
deposed to by one Shalimar Rupu,
goes no further to narrow the wide
extent of the pleadings. Shalimar Rapu described himself as 'the
nominated and appointed agent
of the first plaintiff in terms of a
special power of attorney signed by the first plaintiff on 23 June
2023' employed by the second
plaintiff as its financial manager
stated following:
'I
hereby swear positively to the facts set out in the Summons and
Particulars of Claim and confirm that the Defendants are indebted
to
the First and Second Plaintiffs in the amount and on the grounds set
forth in the Summons and Particulars of Claim.'
[10]
When Mr
Prinsloo
,
who appeared on behalf of the plaintiffs, was asked whether it was
competent to seek summary judgment in circumstances where the
plaintiffs' claims are pleaded in the alternative, such as they have
been, with reference to
the
Cape Business Bureau (Pty) Ltd v Van Wyk and Another
[5]
he sought an opportunity to consider the judgment and deliver short
supplementary heads of argument on the issue. Having received
these
supplementary heads of argument, they do not address the aforesaid
judgment, nor do they address the competency or otherwise
of summary
judgment proceedings in circumstances where the plaintiff is
evidently uncertain as to with which defendant it contracted.
[11]
An explanation for the multitude alternative claims as contained in
the pleadings was proffered in
the plaintiffs in their supplementary
heads of argument. Mr
Prinsloo
explained that the "particulars
of claim set out three claims in the alternative, all which stem from
a considered effort to
employ a cautious approach to pleading. This
is primarily due to the oral nature of the loan agreement". The
supplementary
heads of argument explains further that the defendants
could easily have challenged the construction placed on the loan
agreement
in claim 1, and all it would have taken was an allegation
that, in concluding the loan agreement, the first plaintiff was not
acting
personally but only on behalf of the second plaintiff, hence
the plaintiffs pleaded alternative constructions of the loan
agreements
in claims 2 and 3.
[12]
Unfortunately the plaintiffs' cautious approach to pleading operate
to defeat their right to sue any of the
defendants for summary
judgment.
[13]
The plaintiffs, by way of a draft order delivered with the aforesaid
supplementary heads of argument, have
elected to seek judgment
against the first and third defendants only, jointly and severally
the one paying the other to be absolved.
In support of their
election, the plaintiffs seek to rely on the third claim pleaded in
their particulars of claim read with the
defendants plea thereto.
This approach unfortunately fails to take into account the plea as a
whole, wherein the defendants surprisingly
admit all six variations
of the loan agreement as pleaded by the plaintiffs, whilst denying
that the amounts in question were transferred
in terms of a loan
agreement.
[14]
Notwithstanding the plaintiffs' election during argument to only seek
summary judgment against the first
and third defendants, they are
bound by the pleadings as they stand at the time of the institution
of the summary judgment application
read together with the
allegations contained in the affidavit in support thereof. The
aforementioned summary of claims pleaded
by the plaintiffs
demonstrate that the particulars of claim contain mutually
destructive versions of the loan agreements, as not
all three
variations pleaded can be true and correct at the same time.
[15]
It has been held in
Diesel
Power Plant Hire CC v Master Diggers (Pty) Ltd,
[6]
cited with approval in this division in the unreported judgment of
Liberty
Group Ltd v Sonitis and Another,
[7]
that whilst it is in order in a verifying affidavit to verify a cause
of action based on alternative claims, it is objectionable
to verify
'a cause of action based on two mutually destructive alternative
versions of the cause of action".
[16]
In
Cape
Business Bureau (Pty) Ltd v Van Wyk and Another
[8]
the court specifically held that if the identity of the defendant is
uncertain, for example where there is more than one defendant
and the
plaintiff does not know which one concluded a certain contract with
him, that uncertainty would operate to defeat the plaintiffs
right to
sue any particular one of them for summary judgment.
[17]
This manner of pleading, and a subsequent application for summary
judgment based thereupon, was discussed in
Barclays
National Bank Ltd v Smith
[9]
,
where Booysen AJ (as he then was) concluded that a summons containing
alternative claims and mutually destructive allegations
does not
prohibit the plaintiff from applying for summary judgment on one of
those claims, provided that the verifying affidavit,
in order to be
effective, would have to verify only those allegations which support
that claim.
[18]
The verifying affidavit herein does not verify only the allegations
which support claim 3 as pleaded therein,
but rather verifies all
claims as pleaded.
[19]
In
Threeball
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Lipschitz
,
[10]
the court differentiated between pleading in the alternative, and
confirming claims in the alternative in the affidavit in support
of
summary judgment, in the following terms:
[11]
'Pleading
inconsistent versions in the alternative is, of course, entirely
proper. The pleader knows the limitations of the evidence
available
to him, and that it may be found not to go far enough to establish
the
facta probanda
on which the first cause of action is
based. He therefore pleads in the alternative that the available
evidence is sufficient to
make out a somewhat different cause of
action with elements inconsistent with the cause of action first set
out. The pleader's
alternatives are as to the conclusions of law that
are to be drawn from the available evidence.
A
witness is in a different position. He does not testify about
conclusions of law but about facts. If he purports to testify that
he
met the defendant at a particular time and place and expressly agreed
on a stated price, he cannot expect to be believed if
he also
testifies that he did not meet the defendant, and that they did not
expressly agree on the stated price. That seems to
me to be the
effect of the affidavit filed on behalf of the plaintiff in the
present matter In the present matter it
is not clear that
the alternatives are complementary to each other (as they may be),
and that they are not mutually destructive.'
[20]
The aforesaid reasoning by the court has been held to be correct and
applies equally to the present matter.
Where mutually destructive
versions are verified, there has not been a proper verification of
the cause of action relied on 'because
an essential allegation has in
the same breath been verified and contradicted'
[12]
.
The deponent to the verifying affidavit confirms that the defendants
are indebted to the plaintiffs "in the amount and on
the grounds
set forth in the Summons and Particulars of Claim" and notably
does not purport to verify the allegations only
in support of the
claim relied upon by the plaintiffs at this stage, being claim 3.
[21]
In my view, the deponent's confirmation as aforesaid renders the
application defective because of the uncertainty
that it creates. A
similar view was taken by Wallis J in
Shackleton
[13]
,
as referred to more recently by Mossop J in
Sanlam
Life Insurance Limited v Africhick Trading (Pty) Ltd t/a Africaz and
Others
[14]
in dealing with a situation where it was not clear from the affidavit
in support of summary judgment against which defendant summary
judgment was being sought, he stated:
'...
where the applicant's affidavit is confusing and does not make clear
against whom judgment is being sought and on what basis,
the
application is defective and must fail.'
[22]
In light of what I have stated above summary judgment cannot be
granted. This is so regardless of whether
or not the plea, or the
affidavit opposing summary judgment, sets out a defence
[15]
as there can be no need to consider a defence raised by a defendant
if the summary judgment application is itself defective. For
as
Wallis J further stated in
Shackleton
and cited with approval in
Sanlam
Life Insurance Limited
'The
proper starting point is the application. If it is defective then
cadit quaestio
. Its defects do not disappear because the
respondent deals with the merits of the claim set out in the
summons.'
[23]
I am of the view however that
ex facie
the defendants' plea,
wherein all six iterations of the oral agreements pleaded by the
plaintiffs are admitted, and the only defence
raised pertains to
whether or not such funds were transferred in terms of an oral
agreement as a loan, it is evident that no substantial
point of law
will require determination and that the whole of the matter can be
disposed of in not more than one day. Accordingly,
it would be in the
interests of justice to direct that, subject to the provisions of
Practice Directive 21, this matter be placed
on the expedited trial
roll.
[24]
As the plaintiffs' non-compliance with rule 32(2)(b) was not an issue
raised by the defendants in their affidavit
opposing summary
judgment, and as it may well be that the defendants have no defence
to the action, I am of the view that the usual
order reserving costs
for decision by the trial court is appropriate in the circumstances.
Order
[25]
In the result, the order which I make is as follows:
1.
The application for summary judgment is refused.
2.
The defendants are granted leave to defend the action.
3.
The costs of the summary judgment application are reserved for
decision by the trial court.
4.
This matter is, subject to the provisions of Practice Directive 21,
to be placed on the expedited
trial roll.
Case
information
Date of Hearing:
19 November 2024
Date of Judgment:
05 December 2024
For plaintiffs /
applicants:
Adv Prinsloo
Instructed by:
Eversheds
Sutherland (KZN) Inc.
Plaintiffs'
attorneys
1st Floor
29 Richefond Circle
Ridgeside
Umhlanga
(Ref:
D Avenant/N Naidoo/MAT7878)
Tel:
031 940 0501
Email:donovanavenant@
evershedssutherland.co.za
For respondent:
No appearance
Instructed by:
[1]
Raumix
Aggregates (Pty) Ltd v Richter Sand CC and Another, and Similar
Matters
2020 (1) SA 623 (GJ).
[2]
Ibid para 16.
[3]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976
(1) SA 418
(A).
[4]
Ibid at 423E-F.
[5]
Cape
Business Bureau (Pty) Ltd v Van Wyk and Another
1981 (4) SA 433 (C).
[6]
Diesel
Power Plant Hire CC v Master Diggers (Pty) Ltd
1992 (2) SA 295
(W) at 297C-D.
[7]
Liberty Group Ltd v Sonitis and Another (2013) ZAKZDHC 39 para 7.
[8]
Cape
Business Bureau
fn 5 above at 439A-B.
[9]
1975 (4) SA 675
(D) at 682E and G.
[10]
Threeball
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Lipschitz
1987 (2) SA 633 (W).
[11]
Ibid at 634I-635D.
[12]
Barclays
National Bank Ltd v Smith
1975 (4) SA 675
(D) at 682G-H.
[13]
Shackleton
Credit Management (Pty) Ltd v Microzone Trading 88 CC and Another
2010
(5) SA 112 (KZP).
[14]
[2024] ZAKZDHC 12.
[15]
Gull
Steel (Pty) Ltd v Rack Hire BOP (Pty) Ltd
1998 (1) SA 679
(O) at 683 H
Sanlam
Life Insurance Limited v Africhick Trading (Pty) Ltd t/a Africaz and
Others
[2024] ZAKZDHC para 16.
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