Case Law[2025] ZASCA 198South Africa
Deon Smith and Others v Sasfin Bank and Another (507/2024) [2025] ZASCA 198 (19 December 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
19 December 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Section 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – reconsideration application – Uniform Rules of Court – refusal of application for rescission of two default judgments granted by the registrar- whether applicants met threshold requirement – whether requirements for rescission met.
Judgment
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## Deon Smith and Others v Sasfin Bank and Another (507/2024) [2025] ZASCA 198 (19 December 2025)
Deon Smith and Others v Sasfin Bank and Another (507/2024) [2025] ZASCA 198 (19 December 2025)
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sino date 19 December 2025
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 507/2024
In
the matter between:
DEON
SMITH
FIRST APPLICANT
ELLEN
LOUISE SMITH
SECOND APPLICANT
NADELEI
CC
THIRD APPLICANT
and
SASFIN
BANK LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
SUNLYN
(PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Deon Smith and
Others v Sasfin Bank and Another
(Case
no 507/2024)
[2025] ZASCA 198
(19 December 2025)
Coram:
MEYER, MATOJANE and MOLEFE JJA and CLOETE and NUKU
AJJA
Heard
:
06 November 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
19 December 2025 at 11h00.
Summary:
Section
17(2)(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
–
reconsideration application – Uniform Rules of Court –
refusal of application for rescission of two default
judgments
granted by the registrar- whether applicants met threshold
requirement – whether requirements for rescission met.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Mooki AJ sitting as court of first instance):
The
reconsideration application in terms of
section 17(2)(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
is struck from the roll
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Cloete AJA (Meyer,
Matojane and Molefe JJA and Nuku AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This
is an application in terms of
s 17(2)(f)
of the
Superior Courts
Act
[1
] for reconsideration of an
order by two Judges of this Court. They refused a petition in terms
of
s 17(2)(b)
of the Act for leave to appeal against an order of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high court), which
dismissed
an application for rescission of two default judgments
granted against the applicants.
[2]
The registrar of the high court granted the default judgments in
favour of the first respondent
(Sasfin) in terms of rule 31(5) of the
Uniform Rules of Court (the rules), for payment of R515 623.78,
interest thereon at 11%
per annum calculated from 1 April 2020, and
costs on the scale as between attorney and client. The first default
judgment was granted
on 30 July 2021 jointly against the first and
third applicants, Mr Smith and Nadelei CC (the CC), respectively. The
second was
granted on 5 August 2021 against the second applicant (Mrs
Smith) jointly and severally together with Mr Smith and the CC.
Unless
otherwise indicated, I refer to them collectively as the
‘applicants’.
[3]
The applicants applied for leave to appeal against the high court’s
order, which application
was dismissed. As already indicated, two
Judges of this Court refused their subsequent petition in terms of s
17(2)(b) of the Superior
Courts Act. Their application in terms
of s 17(2)(f) of the Act was thereafter granted by the President of
this Court. The
parties were also directed to address the
merits at the hearing if so required.
Threshold
requirement for reconsideration in terms of s 17(2)(f)
[4]
Section 17(2)(f) was amended with effect from 3 April 2024
[2]
.
It provides
inter
alia
that on application to her, the President of the Supreme Court of
Appeal may refer a decision on petition back to this Court for
reconsideration and, if necessary, variation, in circumstances where
she is of the view that a grave failure of justice would otherwise
result, or the administration of justice may be brought into
disrepute (these are referred to as ‘exceptional
circumstances’).
It bears mention that the President is
constrained to reach that view on the limited information and
submissions placed before
her in chambers.
[5]
The applicants are required to demonstrate to the reconsideration
Court that at least one of these
exceptional circumstances is
present. Their existence is a jurisdictional fact. If either is
not established, that puts an
end to the matter, and we need not
consider whether the refusal to grant leave on petition was correctly
decided, much less whether
the judgment and order of the [high court]
are correct.’
[3]
Put
differently, s 17(2)(f) ‘is not a mechanism for a disappointed
litigant to secure another opportunity for appeal
but rather a
safeguard to avoid manifest injustice.’
[4]
Recently, in
Godloza
and Another v S
[5]
, the Constitutional Court emphasised that merely because separate
judicial officers in one Division or Court arrive at different
conclusions on the same, or substantially similar, facts, this does
not, without more, meet the exceptional circumstances threshold.
Grounds advanced by
applicants to meet the exceptional circumstances threshold
requirement
[6]
The applicants maintain that the exceptional circumstances present
are as follows. First,
they assert that there were two
conflicting outcomes, one being their rescission application (which
was dismissed) and the other
‘in a similar and closely related
matter’ in the same division of the high court, where
rescission was granted. However,
they failed to place any facts
before this Court (or indeed the high court) in relation to that
other matter, and thus no more
need be said about this
[7]
Second, they attack the high court judgment on the following grounds,
namely that: (a) the test
for rescission was incorrectly applied,
resulting in ‘undue hardship’ to them ; (b)
the defence raised
by them of a simulated transaction met the
established ‘
bona fide
’ test; (c) despite
their rescission application not having been ‘pinned’ to
any of the recognised
grounds (namely rule 31(2)(b), rule 42 or the
common law), the high court should nevertheless ‘have
considered the facts
presented in the affidavits and measured the
application’ on each of those grounds; and (d) contrary to the
conclusion of
the high court, they had not been in wilful default of
entry of appearance to defend.
Background
[8]
On 18 November 2019 the CC, duly represented by Mr Smith, concluded a
written Master Agreement
of Hire (master rental agreement) with
Technofin (Pty) Ltd (Technofin)
. Ex facie
that agreement,
Technofin rented certain equipment to the CC for an initial period of
60 months commencing on 18 November 2019,
at a monthly rental of R9
829.05 inclusive of VAT. In terms of clause 2.2 of the master rental
agreement, it was acknowledged and
agreed that at all times the
equipment would remain Technofin’s property. Clause 15 provided
that Technofin was entitled,
without notice, to cede any of its
rights in terms of the master rental agreement to a third party.
Technofin ceded its rights
to the second respondent, Sunlyn (Pty) Ltd
(Sunlyn), which in turn ceded them to Sasfin.
[9]
Clause 21 of the master rental agreement is the ‘sole memorial’
clause, namely that
no amendments thereto would be binding unless
recorded in writing and signed by the parties. It is not
suggested by the applicants
that any such amendments were effected.
At the time of conclusion of the master rental agreement, Mr
and Mrs Smith executed
written deeds of suretyship (referred to as
guarantees) in terms of which they bound themselves as sureties and
co-principal debtors,
jointly and severally with the CC, in favour of
Technofin or any third party as cessionary for all amounts owing
under the master
rental agreement.
[10]
Consequent upon the CC’s breach of its payment obligations
under the master rental agreement, Sasfin
issued summons against the
CC, alternatively against the applicants jointly and severally, for
payment of the capital sum due,
as well as interest and costs on the
scale as between attorney and client, as provided therein. After
service of the summons
and upon expiry of the
dies induciae
Sasfin applied for, and was granted, default judgment.
[11] At
all material times Mr and Mrs Smith were married to each other and
were co-members of the CC. Their application
for rescission was
launched on 21 April 2022, thus about 9 months after the default
judgments were granted. Mr Smith deposed
to the founding
affidavit in both his personal capacity and on behalf of the other
applicants, and Mrs Smith deposed to a confirmatory
affidavit.
According to them they were not in wilful default of entry of
appearance to defend, since the first occasion on
which they became
aware of the default judgments was when Mrs Smith attended at the
office of their erstwhile attorney on 22 March
2022 for an unrelated
matter and was informed thereof ‘in passing’. The
unidentified individual who allegedly
conveyed this information to
her did not depose to a confirmatory affidavit.
[12] It
is common cause that service of the summons was effected by the
sheriff on 3 June 2021 at the residential
address of Mr and Mrs Smith
by affixing a copy to the principal gate, and on a consultant of the
CC, a Ms Weppelman, at its principal
place of business. The
applicants accept that this was effective service as contemplated by
the rules. Their complaint however
is that prior to 22 March 2022,
the summons did not come to their attention, and despite the
sheriff’s return of service
reflecting that its contents were
explained to Ms Weppelman, she could not recall having received it,
although she might have followed
their ‘standard operating
procedures’ by opening a file and forwarding the summons to
their erstwhile attorney.
[13]
In her confirmatory affidavit, Ms Weppelman merely alleged that she
had read the founding affidavit of Mr Smith
and confirmed its
contents insofar as they related to her. She thus failed to take the
court into her confidence about what exactly
she had done to refresh
her memory, including whether or not she had opened an internal file
as required by her employer as ‘standard
operating procedure’,
which no doubt would have provided a record of the steps taken by her
after service of the summons,
as well as when those steps were taken.
[14]
The applicants also contended that the two orders granted by the
registrar were ‘vastly different in
both substance and form’,
because one imposed joint liability (on Mr Smith and the CC) and the
other imposed joint and several
liability on Mrs Smith together with
Mr Smith and the CC. This, according to them, gave rise to an
‘untenable’ situation
because two different orders were
granted in the same action with different legal consequences.
[15] As
to the merits of the defence they wished to raise, the applicants
alleged the following. The CC had needed
to raise capital and did so
by way of refinancing some of its own equipment. Assisted by an
entity, Trend Office Solutions (Pty)
Ltd (Trend), the CC
‘facilitated’ the conclusion of a refinance agreement
with Technofin, in the form of a loan which
the CC would repay
monthly whilst providing that equipment as security for the loan.
[16]
The applicants did not dispute that the CC concluded the master
rental agreement with Technofin upon which Sasfin
relied for its
cause of action against the CC, nor did they dispute the existence or
terms of the two deeds of suretyship executed
by Mr and Mrs Smith
respectively. They alleged, however, that the master rental agreement
was a simulated transaction, as it did
not reflect the true
agreement. Absent from Mr Smith’s founding affidavit were the
essential averments about who represented
the parties in concluding
that ‘refinancing’ agreement, when it was concluded,
where it was concluded, and indeed whether
or not the monthly loan
instalments had been paid. The founding affidavit contained the
most skeletal allegations on this
score.
[17]
Sasfin’s answering affidavit was deposed to by Mr Kughen
Govender, its litigation manager. He explained
it was merely an
oversight that Sasfin’s attorney had not applied simultaneously
for default judgment against all three applicants.
After both were
granted, warrants of execution against movable property were issued
by the registrar on 10 August 2021, but were
met with returns of
non-service at the Smiths’ residential address. On 21 September
2021, Sasfin’s attorney telephonically
contacted the Smiths at
their place of business to discuss the matter with them. The attorney
was informed that the Smiths were
away travelling, but was provided
with their email addresses.
[18]
Sasfin’s attorney addressed an email to Mr and Mrs Smith at
both those addresses on 23 September 2021.
That email, which was
annexed to Sasfin’s answering affidavit, informed them of the
default judgments; annexed the two default
judgment orders; advised
them of the failed attempts to execute against their movable
property; and requested engagement on a possible
settlement of the
judgment debt without the need for further costs to be incurred.
[19]
Although no response was received directly from either Mr or Mrs
Smith (in the replying affidavit they both
claimed to have not
received the email), a notice of intention to defend was delivered by
the applicants’ erstwhile attorney
on their behalf on 14
October 2021. This resulted in Sasfin’s attorney advising him
on 19 October 2021 of the default judgments
already granted against
his clients.
[20]
In the interim it was established that the Smiths were still
occupying their residence, and re-issued warrants of execution
were
accordingly served on them by the sheriff on 18 October 2021, which
yielded
nulla bona
returns. There is a dispute over whether personal service
of the reissued warrants occurred. The sheriff’s
returns
of service reflect this, but Mr and Mrs Smith deny it was the case.
They sought to make something of it.
[21]
However nothing turns on this. The applicants cannot escape the
following undisputed facts. First, by 14
October 2021 at the latest,
their erstwhile attorney was already in possession of the information
necessary to draft and deliver
a notice of intention to defend on
their behalf. That information was not provided to him by Sasfin’s
attorney, but the applicants
did not reveal how their own attorney
came to be in possession thereof. Second, by 19 October 2021, that
attorney was aware that
default judgments had been granted against
his clients. It was these pertinent facts that called for a
reasonable and satisfactory
explanation by the applicants, enabling
the court to properly assess not only wilful default but also undue
delay. No explanation
was provided.
[22]
Returning to the merits of the defence which the applicants sought to
raise in the event of rescission being
granted, they alleged that
Trend had agreed with, or advised, them that the master rental
agreement would in truth be a ‘refinance
agreement’.
Apart from the fact that the applicants failed to identify
Trend’s employee who was allegedly the
source of this
information, Trend was not a contracting party to the master rental
agreement, but merely the supplier of the equipment
in question.
Sasfin correctly submitted that the applicants were silent on
how the CC came to acquire ownership of the equipment
for
‘refinancing’ purposes in the first place, something
which would have been known to them and which one would have
expected
them to disclose.
[23] Ms
Chantal Booysen and Ms Mariana Van Heerden of Technofin deposed to
affidavits confirming the following.
Ms Booysen was the Technofin
representative who hand-delivered the master rental agreement and
deeds of suretyship for signature
by Mr and Mrs Smith in her
presence. She saw the equipment being installed, and confirmed
this to be the case with Mr Smith.
Thereafter Ms Booysen delivered
the master rental agreement to Ms Van Heerden for counter-signature.
Both confirmed under oath
that neither had agreed with the applicants
that the master rental agreement was a ‘refinance agreement’.
[24]
Sasfin also produced documents and email communications between Trend
and Technofin leading up to the conclusion
of the master rental
agreement, which demonstrate that its purpose was always the rental
of new equipment by the CC. Moreover,
Mr Lourens Klopper, a director
of Trend, deposed to an affidavit in which he confirmed that: (a) he
was the individual who dealt
with the applicants regarding the supply
of the new equipment; (b) at no stage did he represent to, or
agree with, the applicants
that the master rental agreement was a
‘refinance agreement’; (c) Trend was the owner of
the equipment prior
to its sale to Technofin; and (d) Trend’s
technicians installed that equipment at the CC’s premises
pursuant to the
conclusion of the master rental agreement.
[25] In
the applicants’ replying affidavit none of the evidence put up
by Sasfin was disputed, either seriously
or at all. Instead the
applicants retreated to raising baseless technical points and
attempting to shift blame onto their erstwhile
attorney, who was
again deprived of the opportunity to place his version before the
court. The ineluctable inference is that
they had no persuasive
response to the weight of evidence against them.
Discussion
[26]
The only real difference between an application for rescission of a
default judgment brought in terms of
rule 31(2)(b), and one brought
under the common law, is the period in which such an application must
be brought after knowledge
of the judgment is obtained. Rule 31(2)(b)
prescribes 20 days, whereas under the common law, the application
must be brought within
a reasonable time. Otherwise, in both
instances the applicant must: (a) give a reasonable and satisfactory
explanation for their
default; and (b) show that on the merits there
is a
bona
fide
defence which
prima
facie
carries
some prospect of success.
[6]
From the summary of evidence set out above, there is little doubt
that the applicants failed to meet either requirement,
and certainly
not the threshold of s 17(2)(f).
[27]
The applicants’ reliance on rule 42 is also misplaced, since
the orders granted by the registrar were
neither erroneously sought
nor granted. Their complaint about the different effects of the two
orders is without substance. The
orders are capable of being read in
harmony with each other. If anything, the first order is to the
benefit of Mr Smith and the
CC. Their joint liability thereunder is
limited to each being liable for 50% of the judgment debt, despite
the terms of the master
rental agreement and the deed of suretyship
executed by Mr Smith.
[28]
The applicants did not seek condonation for the late filing of their
application for rescission, since they
adopted the stance that the
period between 22 March 2022 and 21 April 2022 was a reasonable one.
However they were required to
furnish an explanation for the delay,
at least between 19 October 2021 (when their erstwhile attorney was
advised that default
judgments had already been granted) and 21 April
2022 (when their application for rescission was launched). This is a
substantial
delay of some 6 months.
[29]
In any event, while one of the factors to be taken into account in
considering whether to grant condonation
is an applicant’s
prospects of success on the merits., and strong prospects may excuse
an inadequate explanation for delay
(to a point)
[7]
,
the merits of the applicants’ defence in the present instance
are so weak that inevitably they were nonetheless bound to
fail.
Order
[28] In
the result, the following order is made:
The reconsideration
application in terms of
section 17(2)(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act
10 of 2013
is struck from the roll with costs.
J CLOETE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
applicant:
J
Sullivan
Instructed
by:
Waldick
Inc, Centurion
Symington
& De Kok Inc, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
N
Lombard
Instructed
by:
Wright
Rose-Innes Inc, Johannesburg
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
No
10 of 2013.
[2]
The subsection was amended by s 28 of the Judicial Matters Amendment
Act 15 of 2023.
[3]
Bidvest
Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mandla Wellem Mabena
2025 (3) SA 362
(SCA) paras 9 and 15-17.
[4]
Road
Accident Fund v Sarah Wilson Lewis
[2025] ZASCA 174
(18 November 2025) para 25, referring to
Anvit
v First Rand Bank Ltd
[2014] ZASCA 132
(23 September 2014).
[5]
Godloza
and Another
[2025]
ZACC 24
(5 November 2025) paras 46 – 52.
[6]
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State
[2021]
ZACC 28
; 2021(5) SA 327 (CC);
2021 (11) BCLR 1263
(CC) para 71.
[7]
Valor
IT v Premier, North West Province and Others
[2020] ZASCA 62
;
[2020] 3 All SA 397
(SCA);
2021 (1) SA 42
(SCA)
para 38.
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