Case Law[2024] ZASCA 167South Africa
Munsami v Standard Bank of SA and Others (122/2023) [2024] ZASCA 167 (5 December 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
5 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Application for leave to appeal in terms of s 17(2)(d) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – reasonable prospects of success on appeal – litigant aggrieved by adverse court order not allowed to impeach order in proceedings before another court of equal standing – sale in execution of immovable residential property and transfer of ownership - may be impeached only in exceptional circumstances, including where the purchaser took transfer of the property in bad faith and with knowledge of a defect in the sale – failure to establish bad faith on part of purchaser – no reasonable prospects that the appeal would be successful.
Judgment
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## Munsami v Standard Bank of SA and Others (122/2023) [2024] ZASCA 167 (5 December 2024)
Munsami v Standard Bank of SA and Others (122/2023) [2024] ZASCA 167 (5 December 2024)
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sino date 5 December 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Execution –
Residential
property
–
Applicant
aggrieved that property sold at auction for alleged 6% of value –
After summary judgment granted – Applicant
approaching High
Court to set aside sale in execution – Application dismissed
– Not entitled to impugn summary
judgment order in another
court of equal standing, without appealing against that order –
Not showing collusion or
that purchaser took transfer in bad faith
or with knowledge of defect in sale – Application for leave
to appeal dismissed
– Uniform Rule 46A.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case no: 122/2023
In the matter between:
DAYALAN
MUNSAMI APPELLANT
and
THE STANDARD BANK OF
SOUTH AFRICA LTD FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE SHERIFF RANDBURG
SOUTH WEST
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE REGISTRAR OF DEEDS
JOHANNESBURG THIRD
RESPONDENT
HAZEL IRENE
KNOWLER
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Munsami v The Standard Bank of SA & Others
(122/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 167
(5 December 2024)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, MOCUMIE, MBATHA and SMITH JJA and MAKUME AJA
Heard
:
7 November 2024
Delivered
:
This judgment wat 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 5 December 2024.
Summary:
Application for leave to appeal in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
– reasonable prospects of
success on appeal – litigant aggrieved by adverse court order
not allowed to impeach order
in proceedings before another court of
equal standing – sale in execution of immovable residential
property and transfer
of ownership - may be impeached only in
exceptional circumstances, including where the purchaser took
transfer of the property
in bad faith and with knowledge of a defect
in the sale – failure to establish bad faith on part of
purchaser – no
reasonable prospects that the appeal would be
successful.
ORDER
On appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (Moultrie AJ,
sitting as a court of first instance):
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Smith JA (Dambuza,
Mocumie and Mbatha JJA and Makume AJA concurring):
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against the judgment and
order of the Gauteng Division
of the High Court, Johannesburg, per
Moultrie AJ (the high court). The high court dismissed the
application brought by the applicant,
Mr Dayalan Munsami
(Mr Munsami), to set aside the sale in execution of his
immovable residential property, situated at Lyme
Park Extension 4,
Johannesburg (the property). The fourth respondent, Mrs Hazel Knowler
(Mrs Knowler) bought the property at the
sale on 24 June 2021 and
took transfer of ownership in November 2022. The sale in execution
was pursuant to summary judgment granted
by Mtati AJ (the summary
judgment order), on 9 May 2019, in favour of the first respondent,
the Standard Bank of South Africa Limited
(the bank).
[2]
The second and third respondents, namely the Sheriff of the high
court and the Registrar of Deeds
were cited as interested parties
only and were consequently not involved in the application for leave
to appeal. This Court referred
the application for leave to appeal
for oral argument in terms of s 17(2)
(d)
of the Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act) and the parties were notified that
they must be prepared, if called upon by this
Court, to address the
merits of the application.
Factual background
[3]
On 20 December 2018, the bank issued a combined summons against
Mr Munsami wherein it, inter
alia, claimed payment of various
debts, including the sum of R2 486 766.52 in respect of a
mortgage bond registered over
the property. The bank also sought
orders declaring the property specially executable and authorising
the Registrar to issue a
writ of execution against the property.
[4]
Importantly, in support of its claim to have the property declared
executable, the bank, in its
particulars of claim:
(a)
averred that the property was Mr Munsami’s primary residence
and drew his attention to the
provisions of ss 26(1) and 26(3) of the
Constitution, which accord everyone the right to access to adequate
housing;
(b)
informed Mr Munsami that in terms of s 26(3) of the Constitution, he
could not be evicted from
his home and his home may not be declared
executable and sold in execution, without an order of court made
after the court had
considered all the relevant circumstances;
(c)
explained to Mr Munsami the provisions of Uniform rule 46(1)(a)(ii),
which provide that no writ
of execution shall be issued against his
primary residence unless a court, having considered all the relevant
circumstances, orders
execution against it;
(d)
informed Mr Munsami that if he objected to his home being declared
executable, he was called upon
to place facts and submissions before
the court for consideration in terms of rule 46(1)(a)(ii). He was
cautioned that a failure
to do so may result in an order declaring
the property specially executable, which could result in it being
sold in execution;
(e)
regarding the valuation of the property, attached an automated
valuation report which indicated
that ‘the expected high value’
of the property was R4 940 000, and the ‘expected low value’
was R3 380
000; and
(f)
averred that it was unable to obtain a sworn valuation as Mr Munsami
was unwilling to cooperate.
[5]
After appearance to defend was filed by an attorney acting on behalf
of Mr Munsami, the bank
applied for summary judgment in March
2019. The application having been filed before the amendment of
Uniform rule 32, the bank
was only required to file an affidavit by
an authorised official swearing positively to facts averred in the
particulars of claim
and verifying the cause of action. Despite being
legally represented at the time, Mr Munsami did not file an opposing
affidavit
and consequently did not place any further information
before the high court (other than that contained in the particulars
of claim),
relevant to the exercise of its discretion in terms of
rule 46A.
In the high court
[6]
As mentioned, summary judgment was granted against Mr Munsami on
9 May
2019, inter alia, declaring
the property specially executable without setting a reserve price. It
is common cause that Mr
Munsami did not appeal against the summary
judgement order, neither did he apply for it to be rescinded.
Instead, he launched urgent
proceedings, in December 2020, seeking to
stay the sale in execution on the ground that the notice of sale did
not include a short
description of the property.
[7]
The sale in execution was postponed on four occasions for various
reasons, which are not relevant
for the purposes of this application
for leave to appeal. The property was eventually sold at a public
auction to Mrs Knowler for
the sum of R360 000 and ownership was
transferred to her on 25 November 2021. Mr Munsami consequently still
owes the bank
more than R3 million in respect of the mortgage bond.
[8]
When, on 16 February 2022, Mrs Knowler filed an application for an
order evicting Mr Munsami
from the property, he launched an
urgent application in the high court seeking to set aside the sale in
execution on the grounds
that: (a) the bank had failed to comply with
the provisions of Uniform rule 46A; (b) the high court’s
failure to set a reserve
price vitiates the summary judgment and
renders it void
ab initio
; and (c) there had been collusion
between Mrs Knowler and the bank and she had acted in bad faith in
buying the property for a
price well below its market value. Mr
Munsami further contended that although he did not seek to impugn the
summary judgment order,
he was entitled to the relief simply based on
the bank’s non-compliance with rule 46A and the prejudice he
had suffered as
a result of the property having been sold without a
reserve price.
[9]
In a written judgment delivered on 10 October 2022, the high court
dismissed Mr Munsami’s
application with costs. The high
court found that Mr Munsami was unable to establish collusion between
Mrs Knowler and the bank
or that she had taken transfer of the
property in bad faith with knowledge of the alleged defects in the
sale. It further found
that Mr Munsami’s contention that the
bank failed to comply with the provisions of rule 46A because it did
not bring a separate
application for relief in terms of that rule,
was unsustainable.
[10]
The high court was satisfied that the relevant allegations contained
in the particulars of claim constituted
sufficient compliance with
the rule. In this regard the high court found that ‘the two
procedures were indeed effectively
and properly married’
[1]
and that ‘the provisions of [Uniform] rule 46A were
substantially complied with’. The high court also made short
shrift
of Mr Munsami’s argument that the failure to set a
reserve price vitiated the summary judgment order and rendered it
void
ab initio. In this regard the high court found that there was no
evidence ‘to suggest that when Mtati AJ made the. . . orders,
he did not as required by Rule 46A(9), consider whether a reserve
price was to be set’.
Discussion and
analysis
[11]
In terms of s 17(1) of the Act, leave to appeal may only be granted
if there are reasonable prospects
that the appeal would succeed. In
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[2]
this Court held that even
if the court is not satisfied that there are reasonable prospects of
success, it must still consider whether
there are other compelling
reasons why, in the interests of justice, the appeal should
nevertheless be heard. Such reasons would
include ‘an important
question of law or a discrete issue of public importance that will
have an effect on future disputes’.
This Court further held
that the test regarding reasonable prospects of success ‘postulates
a dispassionate decision based
on the facts and the law that a court
of appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that
of the trial court’.
[12] As
mentioned earlier, it is common cause that Mr Munsami did not apply
for leave to appeal against the summary
judgment order nor did he
apply for it to be rescinded. It was at that stage that the property
was declared specially executable
and the provisions of rule 46A were
applicable. The order therefore remains effectual and immune to
challenge by other means, such
as, amongst others, interdictory
relief by another court of equal standing.
[13] Mr
Munsami’s argument regarding the alleged defects in the rule
46A application and his reliance on
the jurisprudence regarding the
court’s discretion to set a reserve price for sale in execution
of residential immovable
property impermissibly seeks to impugn the
summary judgment order without appealing against it. It is trite that
a litigant who
is aggrieved by an adverse judgment and wishes to
challenge it can only do so by filing an appeal or, in certain
circumstances,
applying to have it rescinded. In my view, the
application brought before Moultrie AJ, which is the subject of this
application
for leave to appeal, was an impermissible attempt by Mr
Munsami to circumvent the immutable rule regarding the finality of
court
judgments and the adjectival law remedies available to an
aggrieved litigant.
[14]
Counsel for Mr Munsami correctly conceded that he was not entitled to
impugn the summary judgment order in
another court of equal standing,
without appealing against that order. It follows that the arguments
pertaining to the contended
non-compliance with Uniform rule 46A and
the high court’s failure to set a reserve price were not
available to Mr Munsami
in the context of an appeal against a
different judgment, namely that of Moultrie AJ.
[15] Mr
Munsami was, however, entitled to raise the arguments that the sale
in execution was vitiated by undue
collusion between the bank and Mrs
Knowles and that the latter took transfer of the property in bad
faith. Those points do not
seek to impeach the summary judgment order
but assails the lawfulness of the sale, based on alleged defects in
how it was conducted.
[16] It
is established law that a sale in execution of immovable property, as
well as the consequent transfer
of the property, may be impeached
only in exceptional circumstances, including where the purchaser took
transfer of the property
in bad faith and with knowledge of a defect
in the sale.
[3]
And, unfortunately for Mr
Munsami, he must now also contend with the consequences of a
bona
fide
public
auction and the principles of the abstract theory of transfer. In
terms of the latter doctrine the validity of a transfer
of ownership
is not dependent on the validity of the underlying transaction.
[4]
[17]
However, nowhere in his founding affidavit does Mr Munsami proffer
any evidence, or for that matter even
allege, that there was
collusion between the bank and Mrs Knowler or that Mrs Knowler took
transfer of the property with knowledge
of a fundamental defect in
the sale. Mr Munsami nevertheless contends that this Court must infer
such collusion and bad faith on
the part of Mrs Knowler based on the
following pleaded averments: (a) Mrs Knowler purchased the property
at a price well below
its true value, which according to Mr Munsami
was some R6million; (b) he was ‘shocked and outraged’
that she was allowed
to purchase the property at 6% of its
approximate value; (c) the facts demonstrate the bank’s lack of
respect, ‘bullying
tactics’ and total disregard for the
rules of court; and (d) it is ‘inconceivable’ that the
bank could have allowed
the sale to take place without a reserve
price, the result being that he still owes it more than R3 million.
[18] I
agree with the high court’s finding that these allegations are
patently inadequate to justify an
inference of collusion or bad faith
contended for by Mr Munsami. At best for him, the pleaded facts
sought to impute some unreasonableness
on the part of the bank and
perhaps abuse of its economic power. There was, however, no
allegation of any collusion between the
bank and Mrs Knowler or that
she had taken transfer of the property with the knowledge that the
sale was allegedly tainted by the
bank’s failure to comply with
rule 46A and the high court’s failure to set a reserve price.
In any event, and as the
high court correctly observed, Mr Munsami
only raised these points after the sale in execution and the
subsequent transfer of the
property. It is therefore manifest that
Mrs Knowler could not have known about any alleged defects in the
sale. The fact that she
had purchased the property at a public
auction for a price well below its value cannot by any stretch of the
imagination justify
an inference of
mala fides
or fraudulent
intent on her part.
[19] In
the final analysis, Mr Munsami only has himself to blame for his
unfortunate dilemma. He had enough opportunities
to challenge the
summary judgment order or to apply for the stay of the sale in
execution. Even though the sale in execution was
postponed for
various reasons on four different occasions before it was sold in
June 2021, Mr Munsami had legal representation
throughout, and on
each occasion been duly notified thereof, he failed to challenge the
validity of the sale on any of the grounds
which he advanced before
the high court. It was only after Mrs Knowler had launched eviction
proceedings against him that Mr Munsami
filed his application to set
aside the sale and transfer of the property, some three years after
the order declaring the property
executable and eight months after
the sale in execution.
[20] Mr
Munsami’s belated attempt to ‘unscramble the egg’,
some eight months after the transfer
of ownership of the property, is
based on unsustainable and tenuous averments which are not grounded
either in fact or law. I am
accordingly of the view that there are no
reasonable prospects that the appeal would succeed, neither are there
any other compelling
reasons why the appeal should be heard.
[21] In
the result, I make the following:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
_______________
J E SMITH
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
MC Molefi
Instructed by:
Leseka Attorneys, Johannesburg
Pieter Skein Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the first
respondent:
JC Coetzer
Instructed
by:
Stupel & Berman Inc., Johannesburg
Lovius Block Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the fourth
respondent: L
Mhlanga
Instructed
by:
Precious Muleya Inc., Johannesburg
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Namely, the summary
judgment and rule 46A procedures.
[2]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[2021]
ZASCA 31
;
[2021] JOL 49993
(SCA) para 10.
[3]
Sookdeyi
and Others v Sahadeo and Others
1952
(4) SA 568
(A) at 571H-572B.
[4]
Legator
McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
2008] ZASCA 144
;
2010
(1) SA 35
(SCA);
[2009].
2 All SA 45
para
20.
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