Case Law[2022] ZACC 10South Africa
Baloyi N.O. and Others v Pawn Stars CC and Another (CCT 15/21) [2022] ZACC 10; 2022 (12) BCLR 1431 (CC) (15 March 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
15 March 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Rule 46A of the Uniform Rules of Court — legal persons and trusts — determination of alleged constitutional issue not reasonably necessary for determination of dispute — jurisdiction not engaged
Judgment
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## Baloyi N.O. and Others v Pawn Stars CC and Another (CCT 15/21) [2022] ZACC 10; 2022 (12) BCLR 1431 (CC) (15 March 2022)
Baloyi N.O. and Others v Pawn Stars CC and Another (CCT 15/21) [2022] ZACC 10; 2022 (12) BCLR 1431 (CC) (15 March 2022)
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sino date 15 March 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 15/21
In
the matter between:
ANDREW
TUEE BALOYI N.O.
First Applicant
EUNICE
MHAKA BALOYI N.O.
Second Applicant
ANDREW
TUEE
BALOYI
Third Applicant
EUNICE
MHAKA
BALOYI
Fourth Applicant
and
PAWN
STARS
CC
First Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE HIGH COURT
Second Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Baloyi
N.O. and Others v Pawn Stars CC and Another
[2022] ZACC
10
Coram:
Madlanga
J, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ, Theron J,
Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J
Judgments:
Theron
J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
23
November 2021
Decided
on:
15
March 2022
Summary:
Rule
46A of the Uniform Rules of Court — legal persons and trusts —
determination of alleged constitutional issue not
reasonably
necessary for determination of dispute — jurisdiction not
engaged
ORDER
On
appeal from the High Court of South Africa, Limpopo Division,
Polokwane:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed.
2.
The applicants must pay the first
respondent’s costs.
JUDGMENT
THERON J
(Madlanga J, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ, Tlaletsi AJ
and Tshiqi J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This application for leave to appeal
was precipitated by an order granted by the High Court of South
Africa, Limpopo Division, Polokwane
(High Court) on 17 April 2018
by agreement between the applicants and the first respondent (consent
order). In terms
of the consent order, and in the event that the
applicants defaulted on payment of certain amounts to the first
respondent, a Polokwane
property (property) owned by the Navuyeriwa
Business Trust (Trust), at which the third and fourth applicants
reside with their
minor children, would become specially executable
and a warrant of execution for the property could be issued. The
applicants contend
that the issue for determination is whether the
consent order contravenes the provisions of rule 46A of the
Uniform Rules
of Court. That rule requires judicial oversight, and
consideration, by a court, of various factors, when a creditor seeks
to execute
against the residential immovable property of a judgment
debtor. The applicants’ central submission is that the consent
order
was impermissibly granted without application of rule 46A
because the High Court erroneously assumed that it does not apply
to
property owned by juristic persons or trusts, and that this raises a
constitutional issue.
Parties
[2]
The applicants are Mr Andrew Tuee
Baloyi and Mrs Eunice Mhaka Baloyi, acting both in their
personal and nominal capacities
as trustees of the Trust. The first
respondent is Pawn Stars CC (Pawn Stars), a duly registered close
corporation, and the second
respondent is the Sheriff of the High
Court.
Background
[3]
In February 2016, Mr and Mrs Baloyi,
acting on behalf of the Trust, entered into a loan agreement with
Pawn Stars. In terms of that
agreement, Pawn Stars advanced an amount
of R870 000 to the Trust which was to be repaid within three months
of signature of that
agreement. Mr and Mrs Baloyi stood surety for
the loan. As additional security, a mortgage bond was registered in
favour of Pawn
Stars over the property. In the event of default, Pawn
Stars was entitled, on written notice and if the default was not
remedied
within seven days, to claim immediate repayment of the full
amount outstanding, together with interest, and to make an
application
to declare the property specially executable. Pawn Stars
was also entitled, if payment of the capital sum was not made within
the
stipulated three months, to levy a penalty fee of R90 000 per
month, which would first fall due on the day immediately following
the due date for repayment of the capital sum.
[4]
The
Trust failed to repay the amounts owing within the stipulated time
period. From 23 May 2016 until 31 October 2016, Mr Baloyi
engaged in
correspondence with Pawn Stars, in which he sought various
extensions within which to make payment. Those extensions
were
granted, on condition that the penalty fees and interest be paid. By
31 October 2016, the Trust had only made one payment
of R95 000 to
Pawn Stars, which thus claimed that it was owed an amount of
R452 410, in addition to the full capital amount.
[1]
[5]
On 8 February 2017, Pawn Stars
instituted proceedings against the applicants in the High Court in
which it sought payment of the
capital amount together with interest
thereon and penalty fees and an order declaring the property
specially executable.
[6]
Subsequent settlement discussions
between the Trust and Pawn Stars came to nought and Pawn Stars’
application proceeded unopposed.
On 18 April 2017, Pawn Stars
obtained default judgment against the applicants. Phatudi J ordered,
amongst others, that the
applicants pay Pawn Stars the amount of
R870 000 together with interest and penalty fees, and that the
property was specially
executable.
[7]
On 15 June 2017, the applicants
applied to rescind that order. They contended that they had not been
served with Pawn Stars’
application and had only become aware
of it when they were served with a notice of attachment for the
property on 18 May 2017.
The applicants further contended
that they were only indebted to Pawn Stars in an amount of R540
000, which they said they
could pay by 1 September 2017.
They submitted, in addition, that the penalty clause in the agreement
was contrary to
public policy, and that the property was occupied by
Mr and Mrs Baloyi, together with their three minor children, as their
primary
residence. Had this information been before Phatudi J, the
applicants submitted, the order of 18 April 2017 would not have been
granted.
[8]
Pawn Stars opposed the application
for rescission on the basis that for purposes of the declaration of
special executability it
was irrelevant that the property was
occupied, because it was owned by a trust. Pawn Stars also noted
that, despite the applicants’
averment that they could make
payment of R540 000 by 1 September 2017, by 25 October
2017, when it delivered its answer,
it had received no further
payments.
[9]
After deliberation between the
parties, who were both legally represented, the rescission
proceedings were settled in terms of the
consent order granted by
Mokgohloa DJP. The material terms of that order were:
(a)
The order of 18 April 2017 was rescinded.
(b)
The applicants were directed to pay Pawn
Stars an amount of R690 000, together with interest and costs on
the attorney and
client scale.
(c)
The first payment of R100 000 was due on or
before 23 April 2018 and a second payment on or before 31 May 2018.
Thereafter, the
balance was to be paid in equal monthly instalments
of R40 000 payable on the last day of each subsequent month
commencing
on the last day of June 2018.
(d)
In the event of any instalment not being
paid on due date, the full balance of the repayable amount then due
would become immediately
due, owing and payable, the property would
become specially executable, and the sheriff would be authorised to
issue a warrant
of execution in respect of the property.
[10]
On 23 April 2018, the Trust made
payment of R100 000 to Pawn Stars, but thereafter defaulted on its
obligations in terms of the
consent order. A warrant of execution for
the property was issued on 25 July 2018, and by subsequent notice a
sale in execution
of the property was scheduled for 5 December 2018.
[11]
The applicants alleged that they
were made aware of the warrant of execution on 13 September 2018 and
the pending sale in execution
on 21 November 2018. On 29 November
2018, the applicants instituted urgent application proceedings in
which they sought, in Part
A of their notice of motion, an order
interdicting the sale of the property pending a determination of Part
B, in which, amongst
others, they sought to set aside the warrant of
execution of 25 July 2018, and to vary the consent order. In terms of
the proposed
variation, the property would only become specially
executable “upon the application of the applicant, Pawn Stars
CC . .
. for an order of judicial supervision before the property can
be sold”.
[12]
The primary basis upon which the
applicants claimed entitlement to this relief was that the consent
order had allegedly been impermissibly
granted without application of
rule 46A. The applicants alleged that the consent order had been
granted without a reserve price
being set, and without consideration
of factors that might have militated against declaring the property
specially executable.
The applicants submitted further that the
consent order left it to the discretion of Pawn Stars to determine
whether the applicants
were in default and that, in effect, the
property would therefore become specially executable without judicial
oversight. All this,
the applicants said, was contrary to the
prescripts of rule 46A.
[13]
Pawn Stars opposed Part A, but the
urgent relief was granted on 5 December 2018. Prior to Pawn
Stars filing its answering
papers in respect of Part B, the
applicants on 19 December 2018 delivered yet another application.
This application sought substantially
similar relief to Part B of the
previous application.
[14]
The nub of Pawn Stars’
response to Part B and to the further application of 19 December 2018
was that, before the
consent order was granted, the parties discussed
the issue of executability, and the outcome of these deliberations
was embodied
in the consent order. Pawn Stars submitted that the
applicants had not alleged that this order was granted by mistake or
as a result
of fraud, and were therefore not entitled to the relief
sought. Pawn Stars noted further that, in any event, the applicants
had
failed to demonstrate that they would be able to satisfy their
obligations without a sale of the property, and had also failed to
set out any other factor which militated against the declaration of
executability. Pawn Stars also brought a counter-application,
conditional upon the success of the applicant’s Part B
application, in which it sought an order declaring the property
specially
executable and setting a reserve price at R1 620 009.
[15]
On 7 November 2019, Madavha AJ
refused the relief sought in terms of Part B and in the application
of 19 December 2018. Madavha
AJ held that the writ of execution had
been issued by the sheriff in accordance with the consent order.
Since the applicants had
not sought to rescind that order, a legal
cause remained extant for the issuance of the writ of execution.
There was accordingly
no basis on which to set that writ aside.
Regarding the applicability of rule 46A, Madavha AJ appeared to
accept that the rule
has application even where the relevant property
is owned by a juristic person or trust. However, she went on to hold
that the
impugned order had been granted by agreement, and that the
applicants had failed to make out a case for its variation or
rescission.
[16]
The applicants’ subsequent
efforts to petition the High Court and Supreme Court of Appeal for
leave to appeal were unsuccessful.
Notably, in their application for
leave to appeal in the High Court, the applicants seemingly accepted
that, in their view, Madavha AJ
had correctly held that rule 46A
applies to properties owned by juristic persons or trusts.
[17]
In this Court, the applicants have
adopted a different tack. They say that the question as to the
applicability of rule 46A was
not decided by Madavha AJ. As a
result, they say that Madavha AJ failed to consider whether the
consent order was granted
after proper application of that rule. They
also contend that Phatudi J’s order was granted without
application of the erstwhile
rule 46(1)(a)(ii), which, at the time
that order was granted, regulated proceedings in which a creditor
sought to have immovable
property declared specially executable.
Plainly, however, the correctness of Phatudi J’s order is
not before us, that
order having been rescinded by the consent order
of Mokgohloa DJP.
[18]
The
central issue for determination – or so say the applicants –
is whether rule 46A applies in respect of property
owned by a
juristic person or trust (rule 46A issue). In this regard, the
applicants ask that this Court overturns the decision
in
Folscher
,
[2]
where it was held that the erstwhile rule 46(1)(a)(ii) did not apply
in respect of immovable property owned by juristic persons.
[19]
Pawn Stars offers three responses.
First, it contends that Madavha AJ found in favour of the applicants
in respect of the rule 46A
issue, but dismissed the application
because the applicants had failed to make out a case for the
variation or rescission of the
consent order. It therefore says that
the applicability of rule 46A, and the correctness of
Folscher
,
were resolved in favour of the applicants. Second, Pawn Stars notes
that the consent order was granted after all relevant issues
were
canvassed, and in circumstances where both parties were legally
represented, and argues that the applicants have failed to
set out
any basis for the variation or rescission of that order. Finally,
Pawn Stars notes that even if rule 46A did have application,
the
applicants have failed to set out any factors which militate against
declaring the property specially executable.
Jurisdiction
[20]
As mentioned, the applicants contend
that this application requires a determination of whether rule 46A
applies in respect of property
owned by a juristic person or trust.
This, they say, is the constitutional issue which engages our
jurisdiction. The applicants
are mistaken. On the facts of this case
we simply do not reach the rule 46A issue and our jurisdiction
is therefore not engaged.
This is so for four reasons.
[21]
First,
as Pawn Stars correctly notes, Madavha AJ appears to have accepted
that rule 46A applied to the immovable property in
question,
even though it was owned by a trust rather than by the applicants in
their personal capacities. As a result, and since
Madavha AJ
dismissed the application, the rule 46A issue was plainly
immaterial to her decision. For this reason alone,
that issue does
not engage our jurisdiction. Issues which are immaterial to a lower
court’s decision cannot provide a jurisdictional
foothold in
this Court.
[3]
[22]
Second, even if rule 46A ought to
have been applied before the consent order was granted, this, without
more, would not entitle
the applicants to variation of that order.
They would, in addition, need to satisfy the requirements for
variation contained in
rule 42 of the Uniform Rules of Court or in
the common law. Plainly, the applicants cannot (and did not) contend
that the consent
order was erroneously granted in their absence. They
have failed to show that the consent order contains any “ambiguity,
or patent error or omission” or that it was granted as a result
of a mistake common to the parties. They have also failed
to show
that the consent order was granted as a result of fraud or on any
other basis which would constitute sufficient cause to
vary that
order. An adjudication of the rule 46A issue is therefore not
reasonably necessary for a determination of this matter
and, for this
reason too, does not engage our jurisdiction.
[23]
Third, relatedly, for the rule 46A
issue to engage our jurisdiction, the applicants would need to show
that, if rule 46A was applied,
the consent order would not have been
granted. Absent such a showing, an adjudication of the rule 46A issue
is not reasonably necessary
for a determination of the present
dispute. The applicants have failed to disclose any factors which may
suggest that, if rule
46A was applied, the consent order would not
have been granted. They do not allege that they will be left
vulnerable to homelessness
if the property is sold in execution and
they have given no indication that they will be able to satisfy their
debts absent a sale
in execution. The applicants’ counsel
submitted that the sole reason why variation is sought is to ensure
that a reserve
price is set for the sale in execution. But there is
no absolute requirement that a reserve price be set before a property
is sold
in execution. Rule 46A(8) provides that a High Court
“may” set a reserve price. In this case, even if rule 46A
did apply, the High Court might well have been satisfied that since
the parties had been legally represented and had agreed to
the
consent order, which did not make provision for a reserve price,
there was no need for a reserve price to be set.
[24]
Finally, in any event, whatever the
correct answer to the rule 46A issue, rule 46A had no
application in the proceedings which
culminated in the consent order.
That order, it will be recalled, was granted pursuant to an
application to rescind the default
judgment. Rule 46A does not apply
in these circumstances. Rule 46A(1) applies “whenever an
execution creditor seeks
to execute against the residential immovable
property of a judgment debtor”. Rule 46A(2) provides that a
court considering
“an application under this rule” –
that is, an application in which a creditor seeks to execute against
the judgment
debtor’s immovable property – must consider
various matters. Rule 46A(3)-(9) are framed with reference to an
application
brought by a creditor seeking leave to execute against
the judgment debtor’s immovable property. Rule 46A
therefore
only has application where a creditor seeks leave to
execute against a judgment debtor’s immovable property. The
consent
order was not granted pursuant to such an application and,
for this reason, rule 46A has no application.
[25]
It
is trite that jurisdiction is decided on the basis of the
pleadings.
[4]
The applicants
pegged their jurisdictional case entirely on the rule 46A issue and
have thus failed to establish that our jurisdiction
is engaged. The
application for leave to appeal must therefore be dismissed. There is
no reason why costs should not follow the
result.
Order
[26]
The following order is made:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed.
2.
The applicants must pay the first
respondent’s costs.
For
the Applicants:
S S Cohen instructed by Ledwaba Attorneys
For
the First Respondent:
J G Dobie instructed by Lloyd
Keiser Attorneys
[1]
The
amount of R452 410 was the monthly penalty of R90 000 for
six months, minus a payment of R87 590, being the
balance of
the payment of R95 000 after deducting agreed legal fees of
R7 410.
[2]
First
Rand Bank Ltd v Folscher
2011 (4) SA 314 (GNP).
[3]
Mbatha
v University of Zululand
[2013] ZACC 43
; 2013 JDR 2759 (CC);
2014 (2) BCLR 123
(CC) at
para 198.
[4]
General
Council of the Bar of South Africa v Jiba
[2019] ZACC 23
; 2019 JDR 1194 (CC);
2019 (8) BCLR 919
(CC) at
para 38.
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