Case Law[2025] ZASCA 38South Africa
Tarentaal Centre Investments (Pty) Ltd v Beneficio Developments (15/2025) [2025] ZASCA 38 (8 April 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
23 August 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Usurious transactions – what constitutes – common law requirement of extortion, oppression, or something akin to fraud – judicial power to refuse enforcement of contractual provisions that are against public policy.
Judgment
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## Tarentaal Centre Investments (Pty) Ltd v Beneficio Developments (15/2025) [2025] ZASCA 38 (8 April 2025)
Tarentaal Centre Investments (Pty) Ltd v Beneficio Developments (15/2025) [2025] ZASCA 38 (8 April 2025)
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sino date 8 April 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Public policy –
Usurious
transactions
–
High
interest rate for short-term bridging finance – Requirement
of extortion, oppression or something akin to fraud
– High
Court finding applicants not discharging onus of showing interest
rate was usurious – Loan agreements
were bona fide
commercial transactions, voluntarily concluded by business
entities – Agreements preceded by bona fide
negotiations –
No exceptional circumstances or reasonable prospects of success on
appeal.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no:15/2024
In
the matter between:
TARENTAAL
CENTRE INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPLICANT
THE
VILLAGE MALL INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
SECOND APPLICANT
and
BENEFICIO
DEVELOPMENTS (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Tarentaal Centre Investments (Pty) Ltd v Beneficio
Developments
(15/2024)
[2025] ZASCA 38
(8 April 2025)
Coram:
MOKGOHLOA ADP, HUGHES, SMITH and KOEN JJA and MUSI AJA
Heard
:
3 March 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down of the judgment is deemed to
be 11h00 on 8 April
2025.
Summary:
Usurious transactions – what constitutes – common law
requirement of extortion, oppression, or something akin to fraud
–
judicial power to refuse enforcement of contractual provisions that
are against public policy.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng
Division
of the High Court, Pretoria (Molopa-Sethosa J, sitting as court of
first instance):
The
application is struck from the roll with costs, including the costs
of two counsel, where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Smith
JA (Mokgohloa ADP, Hughes, Koen JJA and Musi AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
On 16 February 2024, the President of this Court referred the
decision which refused
the applicants leave to appeal against the
judgment and order of the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (the high court),
delivered on 23 August 2023, for
reconsideration and, if necessary, variation, in terms of s 17(2)(
f
)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act). The first and second
applicants are Tarentaal Centre Investments (Pty) Ltd (Tarentaal)
and
Village Mall Investments (Pty) Ltd (Village Mall), respectively. I
also refer to them collectively as ‘the applicants’,
where the context so requires. The respondent is Beneficio
Developments (Pty) Ltd (Beneficio).
[2]
The high court, among others, ordered the applicants, jointly and
severally, to pay
to Beneficio outstanding loans in the sum of
R16 358 068.25 and interest on that amount at the rate of
one percent per
week. It also declared certain immovable property
owned by the applicants specially executable in favour of Beneficio
and dismissed
the applicants’ counterclaim. The applicant’s
application for leave to appeal was unsuccessful and they
subsequently
applied to this Court for leave to appeal in terms of s
17(2)(
b
) of the Act. That application was dismissed on 12
December 2023.
Requirements
for reconsideration and leave to appeal
[3]
Before I deal with the facts, I find it apposite first to refer to
the requirements
for leave to appeal under s 17(2)(
f)
. The
applicants contend that there are exceptional circumstances which
justify the granting of leave to appeal and argued that
a grave
failure of justice would otherwise result if leave were not granted.
Their application is based on the following appeal
grounds: (a) the
interest rate of one percent per week equates to a nominal interest
rate of 52 percent per annum, and is consequently
usurious; (b) if
the interest rate is found to be usurious, the various clauses of the
loan agreements providing for the interest
are void and
unenforceable; alternatively, if those clauses are not severable from
the rest of the agreements, then the loan agreements
are void in
their entirety.
[4]
When the President referred the matter for reconsideration, the
jurisdictional requirement
for the exercise of her discretion in
terms of s 17(2)(
f
)
was the existence of ‘exceptional circumstances.’ That
section was subsequently amended by s 28 of the Judicial Matters
Amendment Act 15 of 2023, which came into operation on 3 April 2024.
In terms of the amended section the jurisdictional facts for
the
exercise for the President’s discretion are, ‘circumstances
where a grave failure of justice would otherwise result
or the
administration of justice may be brought into disrepute.’ The
amendment did not alter the nature of the President’s
discretion in any way since the Constitutional Court in
S v Liesching
and Others
[1]
(
Liesching
)
– which was decided before the amendment - held that the phrase
‘exceptional circumstances’ encompasses the
aforementioned jurisdictional factors.
[5]
In
Motsoeneng
v South Africa Broadcasting Corporation Soc Ltd and Others
[2]
,
this Court held that, ‘[t]he necessary prerequisite for the
exercise of the President’s discretion is the existence
of
“exceptional circumstances”. If the circumstances are not
truly exceptional, that is the end of the matter. The
application
under subsection (2)(
f
)
must fail and falls to be dismissed.’ Once the President
has referred the decision of the two judges refusing leave
to appeal
for reconsideration, ‘the court effectively steps into the
shoes of the two judges’ and may. upon reconsideration,
grant
or refuse the application.
[3]
[6]
The question whether we are entitled, or for that matter obligated,
to consider first
whether exceptional circumstances warranted the
exercise of the President’s powers in terms of s 17(2)(
f
)
did not arise in this appeal, nor was any argument presented to us in
this regard.
[4]
This was because in
argument before us, the applicants’ counsel accepted that they
bore the onus of establishing exceptional
circumstances, either in
the sense of a probability of a grave failure of justice or the
administration of justice being brought
into disrepute. In this
regard counsel submitted that a failure to reconsider the decision
refusing leave to appeal will result
in a ‘grave injustice.’
[7]
The Constitutional Court cautioned in
Liesching
that
s 17(2)(
f
)
is not intended to afford litigants a further attempt at procuring
relief that has already been refused. It is instead ‘intended
to enable the President to deal with a situation where an injustice
might otherwise result. It does not afford litigants a parallel
appeal process in order to pursue additional bites at the proverbial
cherry.’
[5]
The
facts
[8]
At the heart of the dispute between the parties is the lawfulness of
the interest
rate charged in respect of various loan agreements
concluded between Tarentaal and Beneficio, and in the case of Village
Mall,
in respect of a suretyship agreement. The applicants contend
that the interest rate of one percent per week, capitalised monthly,
was usurious, against public policy and unconstitutional.
[9]
It is common cause that the applicants are part of the Nova Group of
Companies (Nova
Group). Having decided to pay debenture holders, the
Nova Group decided to sell certain immovable properties to fund the
payment.
Although the properties were sold, there was a delay in the
transfers and by December 2017 Tarentaal, being the entity through
which the debenture holders would be paid, urgently needed the money.
[10]
None of the entities in the Nova Group could approach traditional
banks or financial institutions
for the money and they elected to
approach Beneficio for short term bridging finance. Mr Myburgh and
another director of the Nova
Group had known Beneficio’s sole
director, Dr Oto Laäs (Dr Laäs), through previous dealings
between him and the
Nova Group. Pursuant to negotiations between the
parties during 13 December 2017 and 3 December 2018, Tarentaal
and Beneficio
concluded various loan agreements and addenda thereto,
in terms of which amounts totalling some R55 million were lent and
advanced
by Beneficio to Tarentaal. The loans were payable within
three months. Village Mall bound itself as surety and co-principal
debtor
for the due performance of Tarentaal’s contractual
obligations by virtue of a written suretyship executed on 13 December
2017.
[11]
The interest rate of 1.25 percent that applied to previous
transactions between the parties was
reduced through negotiations to
one percent per week, capitalised monthly. As security, mortgage
bonds were registered over the
applicants’ unincumbered
immovable property, valued at some R47 200 000.
In
the high court
[12]
In June 2020, Beneficio instituted civil action against the
applicants, jointly and severally,
for,
inter alia
: payment of
the sum of R16 35 068.25, which it alleged was due in terms of the
loan agreements concluded between the parties;
interest on that
amount at the rate of one percent per week, capitalised monthly; and
an order declaring certain immovable property
owned by the applicants
specially executable in favour of Beneficio.
[13]
The applicants defended the action and filed a counterclaim, averring
that the interest rate
charged by Beneficio was usurious and
unenforceable for reasons more fully explained below. In their plea
and counterclaim the
applicants asserted that: (a) when the various
‘putative agreements’ were concluded, the positions
of Tarentaal
and Beneficio were not ‘equipoise’; (b)
Beneficio knew that the loan amount was needed and would be used by
the Nova
Property Group of Companies to fund certain essential
capital requirements and that it had been unable to secure loan
finance by
conventional means from recognised banks or financial
institutions; (c) Tarentaal was compelled to agree to the imposed
interest
rate, even though ‘such rate was, and remains,
excessive, unconscionable, unlawful and a contravention of the first
respondent’s
constitutional rights, to
inter alia
,
property and freedom of trade’; (e) Beneficio’s
insistence on charging the imposed interest rate and to compel
Tarentaal
to accept same was ‘extortionate and/or oppressive
and the imposed interest rate, being excessive and unconscionable, is
usurious and falls to be set aside as being void and unenforceable as
being against public policy, unlawful and unconstitutional.’
[14]
At the trial, the following witnesses testified on behalf of the
applicants: Mr Cornelius
Fourie Myburgh, an attorney and
director of the applicants and other companies that form part of the
Nova Group and Mr Allan Greyling,
who testified as an expert. Dr Laäs
and Mr Jakob Jan Dekker, as an expert witness, testified on behalf of
Beneficio. It is
common cause that none of the witnesses presented
any evidence of extortion, oppression or fraud on the part of
Beneficio,
[15]
Mr Myburgh, in his testimony, said that at the time of the
negotiations he was of the view that
the interest rate was
unreasonably high. He did, however, not raise any objections because
he knew that the Nova Group desperately
needed the money to pay
debenture holders. He conceded that the interest rate of one percent
per week was commensurate with the
usual interest charged by lenders
in respect of short term bridging finance.
[16]
The high court, correctly considering itself bound by the judgment of
this Court in
African
Dawn Property Finance 2 (Pty) Ltd v Dreams Travel and Tours CC
[6]
(
African
Dawn
),
found that the applicants had failed to discharge the onus of showing
that the interest rate ‘was usurious in the
sense that it
amounted to extortion or oppression or something akin to fraud; nor
had they made out any case for a counterclaim.’
The high court
accordingly granted judgment in favour of Beneficio and dismissed the
applicants’ counterclaim with costs
.
In
this Court
The
parties’ submissions
[17]
The applicants argued that the decision of this Court in
African
Dawn
is out of touch with the changed economic circumstances,
does not take account of the importance of interest rates charged by
lenders,
and ought to be revisited. The test restated in that
judgment is inappropriately exacting and is contrary to fairness,
reasonableness,
good faith and
ubuntu
. It also does not pass
constitutional muster as it allows excessively high interest rates to
prevail in the lending industry. This
impacts the economy and
violates s 22 of the Constitution namely, the ability of a person or
entity to trade. The test is consequently
not in accordance with the
spirit, purport and objects of s 39(2) of the Constitution.
[18]
The question whether a transaction is usurious, the applicants
contended, must be determined
in accordance with the ordinary
principles applicable to the enforcement of contractual provisions
that are contrary to public
policy, and not the inappropriately high
test enunciated in
African Dawn
. They submitted that, applying
those principles to the facts of this matter,
there
are reasonable prospects that a court of appeal will find that the
interest rate provided for in the loan agreements
is usurious
and the enforcement thereof will be contrary to public policy.
[19]
The applicants contended further that, in addition to the
circumstances pleaded in their plea
and counterclaim, the following
common cause facts compel such a finding: (a) there was very
little risk to Beneficio. Apart
from the fact that Beneficio itself
considered the risk as being low, the value of the immovable property
which the applicants
put up as security far exceeded the value of the
loans; (b) Tarentaal was known to Beneficio since they previously had
business
dealings; (c) the mark-up on the interest Beneficio charged
Tarentaal was more than 400 percent; (d) the interest rate was not
commensurate with the rates charged by banks and other financial
institutions; and (e) the applicants regarded the rate as being
too
high.
[20]
Beneficio submitted that the legal principles requiring contracts
which have been entered into
freely and voluntarily to be honoured
and for courts to enjoin compliance with their provisions, are
founded both on the common
law and on constitutional values. For this
submission they relied on the decisions in
Merry
v Natal Society of Accountants
[7]
(
Merry
)
and
African
Dawn
.
They submitted that the applicants did not show that those decisions
were palpably wrong. A court of appeal would accordingly
be loath to
depart from those decisions because of the
stare
decisis
rule.
The applicants also did not present any evidence to show that the
transactions were against public policy and hence unenforceable.
Beneficio
further asserted that the applicants failed to establish the
existence of exceptional circumstances or that there are
reasonable
prospects of success on appeal.
Analysis
and discussion
[21]
Before us, the applicants submitted that a grave failure of justice
would result if they were
not granted leave to appeal. However, they
face several formidable hurdles in their endeavour to show
exceptional circumstances
or for that matter, reasonable prospects of
success on appeal.
[22]
First, there is the decision in
African
Dawn
,
where this Court considered a challenge to an interest rate of
between five percent and 6.5 percent, in circumstances where neither
the Usury Act 73 of 1968 nor the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
was
applicable. Restating the test enunciated in
Merry
,
this Court confirmed that the question whether the transaction was
usurious had to be decided in terms of the common law, which
does not
fix a rate of interest beyond which a transaction becomes usurious.
This Court further held that the fact that the amount
of interest may
seem high is not enough to make it usurious and the test is whether
it has been shown that there was ‘oppression,
or extortion, or
something akin to fraud.’
[8]
[23]
Second,
the applicants will face the arduous onus of convincing a court of
appeal to overturn
African
Dawn
and
to find that the test of ‘extortion, oppression or something
akin to fraud’ sets the bar too high. They are effectively
contending for the jettisoning of a principle that has been
consistently applied by our courts in a long line of cases since
1904.
[9]
It is trite that this
Court will not readily depart from its previous decisions and will
observe the
stare
decisis
principle
unless it is convinced that the prior decision was clearly wrong. In
Bloemfontein
Town Council v Richter
[10]
the Court said:
‘
The ordinary rule
is that this Court is bound by its own decisions and unless a
decision has been arrived at on some manifest oversight
or
misunderstanding, that there has been something in the nature of a
palpable mistake a subsequently constituted Court has no
right to
prefer its own reasoning to that of its predecessors – such
preference, if allowed, would produce endless uncertainty
and
confusion. The maxim “
stare
decisis”
should,
therefore, be more rigidly applied in this the highest Court in the
land, than in all others.’
[11]
[24]
This Court’s reluctance to depart from established
jurisprudence was confirmed in in
Brisley
v Drotsky
[12]
(
Brisley
).
In that matter the Court was asked to develop the common law so as to
depart from the so-called
Shifren
[13]
principle, which holds
that a contractual provision requiring alterations to a written
contract to comply with certain formalities
in order to be valid, was
not
contra
bonis mores
and
thus binding. In dealing with an argument that a contractual clause
providing that an amendment will only be valid if it is
reduced to
writing offends the equality clause of the Constitution in that it
protects the ‘strong’ at the expense
of the ‘weak’,
the Court said:
‘
The appellant’s
attack invites us to reconsider that [the
Shifren
].
decision We are obliged to do so in the light of the Constitution and
of our “general obligation”, which is not purely
discretionary, to develop he common law in the light of fundamental
constitutional values. For the reasons the joint judgment gives,
I do
not consider that the attack can or should succeed. The
Shifren
decision
represented a doctrinal and policy choice, which on a balance, was
sound. Apart from the fact of precedent and weighty
considerations of
commercial reliance and social certainty, that choice in itself
remains sound four decades later. Constitutional
considerations of
equality do not detract from it. On the contrary, they seem to me to
enhance it.’
[14]
[25]
Third, the applicants did not present any evidence of oppression,
extortion or ‘something
akin to fraud’ that could render
the transaction usurious. They instead relied on considerations of
public policy for their
submission that the test enunciated in
African Dawn
and other cases places the bar too high. They
argued that the test accordingly does not pass constitutional muster
and is contrary
to fairness, reasonableness, good faith and
ubuntu
.
The right of freedom to trade enshrined by s 22 of the Constitution
is also violated in circumstances where excessively high interest
rates impact upon the ability of a person to trade. It is therefore
not in accordance with the spirit, purport, and objects of
the Bill
of Rights as contemplated in s 39(2) of the Constitution. The
applicants accordingly contend for the development of the
common law
through the formulation of a rule that the question whether a
transaction is usurious must be determined in accordance
with the
ordinary principles applicable to contractual provisions or the
enforcement thereof being contrary to public policy.
[26]
The contention that the common law rule falls short of the spirit,
purport and objects of the
Constitution, was considered by this Court
in
African
Dawn.
The
Court held that in considering whether there was a need to develop
the common law, it had to undertake the two-stage enquiry
postulated
in
S v
Thebus
,
[15]
namely: (a) given the
objectives of s 39(2) of the Constitution, whether the common
law should be developed beyond existing
precedent – if the
answer to this question is no, then it is the end of the enquiry; and
(b) if the answer is yes, the next
enquiry is how the common law
should be developed and which court should do it.
[27]
This Court also cautioned that leaving the interpretation of the term
‘usurious’
to ‘the whim of a particular judge’,
depending on his or her personal perceptions of fairness and good
faith, would
militate against a clear formulation of the law that
makes a transaction usurious. In finding that the rule endorsed in
Merry
does not offend
Constitutional values, the Court held that it: restrains unwarranted
judicial interference in contracts freely and
voluntarily concluded;
clearly defines the circumstances in which judicial interference with
such contracts is permitted; and effectively
strikes a balance
between the need for judicial deference for the volition of
contracting parties and the need for judicial oversight
to curb
unacceptable abuses of the freedom to contract.
[16]
As was the case in
Brisley
,
the Court was of the view that ‘the common-law rule is not
inimical to the values that underlie our constitutional
democracy.’
[17]
[28]
I am not persuaded that the judgments of this Court in
Merry
and
African Dawn
were based on some manifest mistake or
oversight and are palpably wrong. The reasoning and findings in those
decisions have withstood
the test of time and they remain sound and
unassailable despite the evolving social and economic conditions. In
terms of the
stare decisis
rule, those decisions will
accordingly be binding on a court of appeal.
[29]
I now turn to consider the applicants’
arguments regarding the development of the common law.
In
considering whether there is a need to develop the common law beyond
the rule restated in
Merry
and
African Dawn
on the
basis contended for by the applicants, the first question that arises
is: what is the state of our law regarding judicial
power to declare
a contractual provision unenforceable because it offends against
public policy?
[30]
In
AB v
Pridwin Preparatory School
,
[18]
(
Pridwin
)
this Court pronounced the following principles that govern judicial
discretion to invalidate or refuse to enforce contracts that
are
contrary to public policy: (a) public policy demands that contracts
freely and voluntarily entered into must be honoured; (b)
a court
will declare invalid a contract that is
prima
facie
inimical
to a constitutional value or principle, or otherwise contrary to
public policy; (c) where a contract is not prima facie
invalid but
its enforcement in particular circumstances is, a court will not
enforce it; (d) a party who assails the contract or
is enforcement
bears the onus to establish the facts; (e) a court will use the power
to invalidate a contract or not to enforce
it, sparingly, and only in
the clearest of cases in which harm to the public is substantially
incontestable and does not depend
on the idiosyncratic inferences of
a few judicial minds; (f) a court will decline to use this power
where a party relies directly
on abstract values of fairness and
reasonableness to escape the consequences of a contract because they
are not substantive rules
that may be used for this purpose.
[31]
The Constitutional Court authoritatively pronounced on that issue in
Beadicia
231 CC and Others v Trustees of the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
[19]
(
Beadicia
).
Commenting on the principles enunciated in
Pridwin
,
the Constitutional Court stated that ‘there has, in fact,
largely been general uniformity of principles between the two
courts’
and that
those
principles ‘are derived from a long line of cases and find
support in the decisions of this Court.’
[20]
[32]
The Constitutional Court, however, highlighted two areas of
conceptual differences between the
two courts, namely, this Court’s
view regarding the centrality of
the pacta sunt servanda
principle
in our law; and the doctrine of “perceptive restraint”,
which has been ‘repeatedly espoused by the Supreme
Court of
Appeal.’ In terms of the latter principle, courts must use the
power to invalidate a contract or not to enforce
it, sparingly, and
only in the clearest of cases.
[33]
In respect to the first issue, the Constitutional Court said, ‘
[i]n
our
new
constitutional era,
pacta
sunt servanda
is
not the only, nor the most important principle informing the judicial
control of contracts. The requirements of public policy
are informed
by a wide range of constitutional values. There is no basis for
privileging
pacta
sunt servanda
over
other constitutional rights and values. Where a number of
constitutional rights and values are implicated, a careful balancing
exercise is required to determine whether enforcement of the
contractual terms would be contrary to public policy in the
circumstances.’
[21]
[34]
Regarding the principle that courts must exercise ‘perceptive
restraint’, the Constitutional
Court, while commending that
guarded approach as sound, cautioned that
courts
‘should not rely upon this principle of restraint to shirk from
their
constitutional
duty to infuse public policy with constitutional values in deserving
cases. The Court, nevertheless, emphasised that
the differences
between it and this Court are more perceived than real and confirmed
that ‘the principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
gives
effect to the “central constitutional values of freedom and
dignity” and that ‘in general public policy
requires that
contracting parties honour obligations that have been freely and
voluntarily undertaken.’
[22]
[35]
In my view, the first question, namely whether there is a need to
develop the common law, must
be answered in the negative. This Court,
in
Pridwin
and the Constitutional Court in
Beadicia
,
undertook comprehensive surveys of our jurisprudence regarding the
question of judicial power to interfere with contracts freely
and
voluntarily concluded. The Courts judiciously considered the extent
to which the principle of
pacta sunt servanda
might implicate
constitutional values and ‘the weighty considerations of
commercial reliance and social certainty.’
Based on those
considerations the Courts have formulated legal rules that strike a
fair balance between the compelling principle
that contracts freely
concluded must be honoured and the power of courts to interfere where
the right of freedom to contract has
been abused. In my view those
decisions provide clarity and certainty regarding the circumstances
in which judicial interference
with contractual freedom would be
warranted. There are accordingly no reasonable prospects that a court
of appeal will find any
rationale for the development of those common
law principles.
[36]
The question then arises whether, in the light of those legal
principles, the applicants have
shown that the transactions were
against public policy. In my view they failed to do so.
[37]
The material facts of this matter are on all fours with those in
African Dawn
. It is common cause that the parties in this
matter entered into the loan agreements freely and voluntarily. The
applicants are
wealthy business entities who required the funds for
commercial transactions. They were aware of the conditions on which
Beneficio
would provide bridging finance, having had previous
business dealings with it.
[38]
Tarentaal’s complaint that its position was not ‘equipoise’
with that of Beneficio
was also belied by the fact that it was
represented by an experienced commercial attorney throughout the
negotiations that preceded
the conclusion of the contracts. It was
able to negotiate a reduction in the interest rate from 1.25 percent
to one percent and
have thereafter concluded similar agreements with
Beneficio for further loans over a period of several months. It was
also common
cause that the Nova Group had realised funds from the
sale of immovable properties but chose not to repay the loans and
instead
took further loans from Beneficio. The interest rate was also
in line with that usually charged for bridging capital in the
industry.
[39]
Another important consideration that the applicants have underplayed
is that although interest
was calculated daily and capitalised
monthly, and as they were at pains to point out – amounted to
52 percent per annum –
the loans were only for periods of three
months. This means that if Tarentaal had complied with its
contractual obligations, it
would have paid approximately 15 percent
interest for the periods of the loans.
Findings
and order
[40]
In summary then, I find that the common cause facts established that
the loan agreements were
bona fide
commercial transactions,
voluntarily concluded by business entities. The agreements were
preceded by
bona fide
negotiations that yielded a reduction in
the interest rate and as mentioned earlier, resulted in the
conclusion of several loan
agreements over a period of months.
[41]
In my view, the applicants have failed to show
that there is any legal basis on which a court would depart from the
principles restated
in
Merry
and
African Dawn
or
that the transactions were against public policy based on the
principles enunciated in
Beadicia
and
Pridwin
.
They have failed to establish exceptional circumstances in terms of
s 17(2)(
f
),
nor have they shown that there are reasonable prospects of success on
appeal. The application for reconsideration must therefore
fail.
There is no reason why costs should not follow the result.
[42]
In the result, I make the following order:
The application is struck
from the roll with costs, including the costs of two counsel, where
so employed.
J
E SMITH
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
L Hollander and M Mahlangu
Instructed
by
VFV Attorneys Inc, Pretoria
McIntyre Van der Post,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
FH Terblanche SC and AJ Wessels
Instructed
by:
Laӓs Döman Inc, Pretoria
Van Wyk & Preller,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Liesching
v
S
(CCT304/16);
[2018] ZACC 25
; 2018 BCLR (CC);
2019 (1) SACR 178
(CC);
2019 (4) SA 219
(CC) para 138.
[2]
George Hlaudi
Motsoeneng v South Africa Broadcasting Corporation Soc Ltd and
Others
(Case
no 64/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 80
; 2024 JDR 2195 (SCA) at para 14.
[3]
Ibid para 14.
[4]
This question was
considered in
Bidvest
Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mandla Mabena
(986/2013)
[2025] ZASCA
23
(26 March 2025), which was delivered after this matter was
argued.
[5]
Liesching
fn
2 above para 139.
[6]
African
Dawn Property Finance 2 (Pty) Ltd v Dreams Travel and Tours CC
[2011]
ZASCA 45; 2011 (3) SA 511 (SCA); [2011] 3 All SA 345 (SCA).
[7]
Merry
v Natal Society of Accountants
1937
AD 331.
[8]
African Dawn
fn 1 para 20.
[9]
Reuter
v Yates
1904
TPD 855.
[10]
Bloemfontein
Town Council v Richter
1938
AD 195.
[11]
Ibid
at 232.
[12]
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002
(4) SA 1 (A); 2002 (12) BCLR 1229 (SCA).
[13]
The
principle was enunciated in
SA
Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaaskappy Bpk v Shifren en Andere
1964
(4) SA 760 (A).
[14]
Brisley
fn 10
above para 90.
[15]
Thebus
and Another v S
[2003]
ZACC 12
;
2003 (6) SA 505
(CC); 2003(1) BCLR 1100 (CC);
2003 (3) SACR
319
(CC) para 26.
[16]
African
Dawn
fn
1 para 28.
[17]
Ibid para 29.
[18]
AB
and Another v Pridwin Preparatory School
and
Others
[2018]
ZASCA 150
;
[2019 (1) All SA 1
(SCA);
2019 (1) SA 327
(SCA);
2019 (8)
BCLR 1006
(SCA) para 27.
[19]
Beadicia
231 CC and Others v Trustees of the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
(CCT109/19)
[2020] ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC) (17
June 2020).
[20]
Ibid
para 82; See also:
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5; 2007 (5) SA 323 (CC); 2007 (7) BCLR 691 (CC).
[21]
Baedicia
fn
17 above para 87.
[22]
Ibid para 90.
sino noindex
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