Case Law[2022] ZASCA 88South Africa
Petrus Johannes Bestbier and Others v Nedbank Limited (150/2021) [2022] ZASCA 88; 2023 (4) SA 25 (SCA) (13 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
13 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Applicability of rule 46A of the Uniform Rules of Court (the rules) – whether rule 46A of the rules applies when property sought to be declared executable was owned by a trust and is a primary residence of trust beneficiaries – whether trust beneficiaries and their employees are entitled to the constitutional safeguards.
Judgment
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## Petrus Johannes Bestbier and Others v Nedbank Limited (150/2021) [2022] ZASCA 88; 2023 (4) SA 25 (SCA) (13 June 2022)
Petrus Johannes Bestbier and Others v Nedbank Limited (150/2021) [2022] ZASCA 88; 2023 (4) SA 25 (SCA) (13 June 2022)
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sino date 13 June 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no:
150/2021
In
the matter between:
PETRUS
JOHANNES BESTBIER
FIRST APPELLANT
HANLIE
BESTBIER N
O
SECOND APPELLANT
CAREL
BRINK BESTBIER N O
THIRD APPELLANT
FRANS
STEFANUS BOTES N O
FOURTH APPELLANT
and
NEDBANK
LIMITED
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Petrus Johannes Bestbier and Others v
Nedbank Limited
(Case No. 150/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 88
(13
June 2022)
Coram:
SALDULKER,
MOLEMELA and DLODLO JJA and WEINER and MOLEFE AJJA
Heard
:
9 March 2022
Delivered
:
13 June 2022
Summary:
Applicability of rule 46A of the Uniform Rules of Court (the
rules) –
whether rule 46A of the rules
applies when property sought to be declared executable was owned by a
trust and is a primary residence
of trust beneficiaries –
whether trust beneficiaries and their employees are entitled to the
constitutional safeguards.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town
(
Kusevitsky J
sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is
dismissed
.
2
The appellants shall pay the respondent’s
costs jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be
absolved, including
the costs of two counsel where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Molefe
AJA (
Saldulker, Molemela and Dlodlo
JJA and Weiner AJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the order and judgment of the Western Cape
Division of the
High Court, Cape Town (the high court), per
Kusevitsky J. The high court granted judgment in favour of the
respondent, Nedbank
Limited, against the first to the fourth
appellants in their official capacities as trustees of Goede Hoop
Trust (the trust), for
payment of the undisputed debt, as well as
declaring Goede Hoop Wine Estate (the property) executable. Judgment
was also granted
against the first appellant, Petrus Johannes
Bestbier, in his personal capacity based on a suretyship agreement.
Leave to appeal
was granted by the high court in respect of both the
money judgment and the order declaring the property executable.
[2]
This appeal concerns the applicability of rule 46A of the Uniform
Rules of Court (the
rules) and Practice Directive 33A of the high
court as the property sought to be declared executable is owned by a
trust and is
a primary residence of the trust beneficiaries, as well
as the trust employees and their families (the farmworkers).
Factual
background
[3]
The appellants are the trustees of the trust, and the first appellant
is also a surety.
The trust conducts business as a wine farm, wine
cellar, wine merchant and restaurateur in Stellenbosch, Western Cape.
The trust
also owns equipment, machinery and stock in trade amounting
to approximately R5 million. The first and second appellants reside
in the main house while their son occupies a cottage on the property.
The trust’s permanent employees and their families
occupy 12
smaller cottages on the property.
[4]
The trust obtained substantial financial assistance from the
respondent in the form
of an overdraft and a loan, secured by nine
mortgage bonds over the property, totalling R9,2 million. When the
appellants failed
to comply with their obligations, the respondent
issued summons against them for repayment of the debt and an order
declaring the
trust’s mortgaged property executable. The
respondent’s claim against the appellants amounts to R8
564 443.00
plus interest.
[5]
Thereafter, the respondent launched an application for a summary
judgment. Following
this, the matter was settled in terms of a
written settlement agreement between the parties in March 2019. In
terms of that settlement
agreement, the appellants
,
admitted,
inter alia,
their indebtedness to the respondent and agreed to
pay a specified amount together with interest. They also agreed that
in the event
that they failed to pay the amount in question, the
respondent would be entitled to proceed with an application that
provided for
payment, failing which, the private sale of the property
or, failing which judgment by consent. They also agreed to an order
declaring
the property bonded to the respondent executable and they
agreed on the minimum reserve price. The appellants reneged on their
undertaking to pay the respondent, failed to sell the property
privately and refused to honour their consent for the immovable
property to be declared executable.
[6]
As a result, the respondent launched an application for judgment by
consent, including
an order declaring the property executable, which
was opposed by the appellants. The high court granted judgment for
payment and
an order declaring the immovable property executable. The
appellants appeal both the judgment and the order. In addition, the
appellants
dispute the order declaring the property executable,
substantially on the grounds that the respondent was obligated to
comply with
the procedure prescribed by rule 46A, although the
appellants had agreed to privately sell the property and consented to
the sale
in execution if they failed to pay.
[7]
The appellants contend that the immovable property owned by a trust
and occupied as
a primary residence by natural persons (such as the
trustees, trust beneficiaries and trust employees) constitutes
‘residential
immovable property of a judgment debtor’,
therefore triggering the application of rule 46A. The appellants
submitted that
the wording and literal meaning of the rule confirm
that the requirement of compliance with rule 46A is not limited to
property
that is the primary residence of the judgment debtor.
The
legislative and historical context of rule 46A
[8]
It is trite that the Constitution of South Africa provides for
justiciable socio-economic
rights and this includes the right to have
access to adequate housing which is enshrined in s 26 of the
Constitution. The underlying
rationale of rule 46A is to impose
procedural rules to give effect to that fundamental right. Rule 46A
must therefore be interpreted
purposively against the backdrop of s
26 of the Constitution, which grants access to housing.
[9]
In 2010, the rules were amended to introduce the express requirement
in rule 46(1)
(a)
(ii)
that residential property may only be sold in execution if so
authorised by a court having considered all the relevant factors.
[1]
Rule 46A was added to the rules on 22 December 2017 in response to
divergent approaches adopted by the South African courts regarding
the nature of the enquiry and factors to be considered when
exercising judicial oversight over orders of execution against
residential
immovable property.
[2]
[10]
Rule 46A must be interpreted in view of the relevant historical and
legislative context, and
taking into account the purpose and
objectives of the rule. Rule 46A(1) and (2) provide that:
‘
(1)
This rule applies whenever an execution creditor seeks to execute
against the residential immovable property of a judgment debtor.
(2)
(a)
A court considering an application under this rule must –
(i) establish whether the immovable
property which the execution creditor intends to execute against is
the primary residence of
the judgment debtor; and
(ii) consider alternative means by the
judgment debtor of satisfying the judgment debt, other than execution
against the judgment
debtor’s primary residence.
(b)
A court shall not authorise execution
against immovable property which is the primary residence of a
judgment debtor unless the
court having considered all relevant
factors, considers that execution against such property is warranted.
(c)
The registrar shall not issue a writ of
execution against the
residential
immovable property of any judgment debtor
unless a court has ordered execution against such property.’
(My emphasis).
[11]
In
Jaftha
v Schoeman and Others, Van Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
(
Jaftha
)
,
[3]
the Constitutional Court had occasion to consider the
constitutionality of section 66 of the Magistrates’ Court Act
32 of
1944 (the Magistrates’ Act). The impugned section 66
provided as follows:
‘
Whenever
a court gives judgment for the payment of money or makes an order for
the payment of money in instalments, such judgment,
in case of
failure to pay such money forthwith, or such order in case of failure
to pay any instalment at the time and in the manner
ordered by the
court, shall be enforceable by execution against the movable property
and, if there is not found sufficient movable
property to satisfy the
judgment or order, or the court, on good cause shown, so orders, then
against the immovable property of
the party against whom such
judgment has been given or such order has been made.’
The
Constitutional Court held that section 66(1)
[4]
was unconstitutional as it violated the right to access to housing as
provided for in s 26(1)
[5]
of the Constitution to the extent that it allowed for the execution
of the homes of indigent debtors resulting in them losing their
security of tenure even where there were no countervailing
considerations in favour of the creditor justifying the sales in
execution.
The Constitutional Court ordered that the appropriate
remedy to save the section would be an order requiring judicial
oversight
over the execution process of all immovable property.
[6]
The
construction and the order in
Jaftha
recognised that the sale in execution of a person’s home limits
the right to housing, and such limitation must be justifiable
in
terms of s 36 of the Constitution. Thus, judicial oversight was an
essential element of the application for the sale in execution
of a
residential home.
[12]
In
Gundwana
v Steko Development and Others
(
Gundwana
),
[7]
the Constitutional Court clarified that the
Jaftha
decision
applies not only in exceptional cases but also in typical mortgage
foreclosure cases brought before the high court.
[13]
This Court, in
Mkhize
v Umvoti Municipality and Others,
[8]
endorsed the observation of the court a quo,
[9]
per Wallis J, who, relying on this Court in
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Saunderson and Others,
[10]
held that s 26(1) of the Constitution is not compromised in every
case where execution is levied against immovable property. Wallis
J
observed that:
‘
.
. . The present is a case where it is not compromised or even
engaged. It would be wrong to construe the declaration made and
reading-in decreed by the Constitutional Court as applying to sales
in execution in the magistrates’ court that it did not
consider
or hold to suffer from a constitutional defect. That would amount to
saying that the Court has amended s 66(1)
(a)
in the absence of a constitutional foundation for doing so. Such a
result would infringe the doctrine of the separation of powers
that
is fundamental to our constitutional order.’
[11]
[14]
In
Standard
Bank of South Africa v Hendricks and Another and Related Cases,
[12]
the court emphasised that creating a greater degree of national
uniformity between divisions of the high court would be advantageous
to litigants as well as to the courts. In
Camps
Bay Ratepayers and Residents Association v Harrison
,
the Constitutional Court quoted with approval Hahlo and Kahn, who
explained the principles underlying the doctrine of precedent
as
follows
:
‘
certainty,
predictability, reliability, equality, uniformity, convenience: these
are the principal advantages to be gained by a
legal system from the
principle of
stare
decisis
.’
[13]
The
Constitutional Court in
Camps
Bay
went
on to say that the doctrine of precedent is ‘. . . a
manifestation of the rule of law itself, which in turn
is a founding
value of our Constitution. To deviate from this rule is to invite
legal chaos’.
[14]
[15]
Section 39(2) of the Constitution mandates a value-orientated
approach to the interpretation
of the law, in which the values that
‘suffuse the whole process are derived from the concept of an
open and democratic society
based on freedom and equality. . .’.
[15]
We must guard against manufacturing our interpretation of the law to
erode constitutional authority.
Analysis
[16]
The appellants contended that the high court erred and misinterpreted
rule 46A in finding that
the rule is only triggered when a property
is the debtor’s primary residence. It is further argued that
the interpretation
adopted by the high court is contrary to the
value-orientated approach sanctioned by the Constitutional Court,
which demands that
the interpretation must be generous and purposive
and give expression to the values of the Constitution whilst paying
due regard
to the language used.
[16]
It was further argued that the high court’s interpretation of
rule 46A is inconsistent with s 39(2) of the Constitution and
that
the restrictive interpretation fails to adequately protect the rights
under s 26, particularly the rights of persons occupying
property
owned by a trust, as well as vulnerable farmworkers.
[17]
As aforementioned,
Gundwana
determined that the combined effect of
Jaftha
and
Lesapo
v North West Agricultural Bank and Another
[17]
was that (a) execution may only follow upon a judgment by a court of
law; and (b) where execution against the homes of indigent
debtors
who run the risk of losing their security of tenure is sought,
judicial oversight of the execution process by a court of
law is
essential. Simply put, rule 46A was meant to protect indigent debtors
who were in danger of losing their homes and give
effect to s 26 of
the Constitution.
[18]
[18]
The facts in casu indicate a diametrically opposite situation. The
circumstances do not involve
a mortgage loan taken out to acquire a
primary residence but involve a commercial loan to be employed in the
business of the trust,
which conducts business as a wine farm. The
question is whether the execution of the immovable property could
impair the appellants’
existing and potential access to
adequate accommodation.
[19]
As aforementioned,
Jaftha
and
Gundwana
were only concerned with cases where the right to adequate housing
was impaired or potentially impaired. Section 26(1) of the
Constitution is not compromised in every case where execution is
levied against immovable property.
[19]
In
Jaftha
,
the two applicants were unemployed women who occupied homes purchased
with the assistance of a State housing subsidy. It was clear
that if
they were evicted because of the sale in execution, they would have
been left with no adequate accommodation.
Judicial
Oversight
[20]
The aim of rule 46A is to assist the Court in considering whether the
s 26 rights of the judgment
debtor would be violated if his/her house
is sold in execution. Rule 46A contains procedural prescripts, not
substantive law.
[20]
The
requirement of judicial oversight in s 26 of the Constitution must be
viewed in light of South Africa’s history of forced
removals
and racist evictions during apartheid and the need to protect
security of tenure of all South Africans. The following
passage in
Jaftha
is apposite:
‘
Section
26 must be seen as making that decisive break from the past. It
emphasises the importance of adequate housing and in particular
security of tenure in our new constitutional democracy. The indignity
suffered as a result of evictions from homes, forced removals
and the
relocation to land often wholly inadequate for housing needs has to
be replaced with a system in which the state must strive
to provide
access to adequate housing for all and, where that exists, refrain
from permitting people to be removed unless it can
be justified.’
[21]
[21]
As correctly stated in
Jaftha
,
‘j
udicial
oversight . . . is constitutionally required so that the judicial
officer can “engage in a balancing process”
and “consider
all the relevant circumstances of a case” to determine whether
there is good cause to order execution
against the immovable property
concerned’.
[22]
In
my view,
the
observations made by the majority judgment in
Mkhize
v Umvoti
are equally apposite in the circumstances of this case, even though
they were expressed in a slightly different context before
rule 46A
was added to the rules. The majority judgment said:
‘
[20]
. . . the order made in
Jaftha
, as the context of the
judgment shows, is aimed at preventing the infringement of the right
to adequate housing. This is the sole
purpose of requiring judicial
oversight in all cases of execution against immovable property.
.
. .
[24]
We detect no ambiguity in the order in
Jaftha
. In that case
and later in
Gundwana
the Constitutional Court made it clear
that in all cases of execution against immovable property judicial
oversight is required.
…. In
Gundwana
Froneman J said
the following: “Some preceding enquiry is necessary to
determine whether the facts of a particular matter
are of the
Jaftha
-kind”.
.
. .
[26]
The object of judicial oversight is to determine whether rights in
terms of s 26(1) of the Constitution are implicated. In
the main a
number of cases grappling with
Jaftha
sought
to arrive at that determination without accepting that judicial
oversight was required in every case. How, it must
be asked, can a
determination be made as to whether s 26(1) rights are implicated,
without the requisite judicial oversight? We
are unable to understand
the difficulty of applying the principle that it is necessary in
every case to subject the intended execution
to judicial scrutiny to
see whether s 26(1) rights are implicated. . . .’
[23]
With
these remarks I would like to express unqualified agreement.
[22]
Rule 46A 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’. There is
considerable force in
Du Plessis and Penhold’s argument in
their discussion of
Jaftha
and
Saunderson
that the only way to determine whether the right to adequate housing
has been compromised is to require judicial oversight in all
cases of
execution against the immovable property on a case-by-case basis.
[24]
The sole purpose of judicial oversight in all cases of execution
against immovable property is to ensure that the orders being
granted
did not violate s 26(1) of the Constitution and that the judgment
debtor is likely to be left homeless as a result of the
execution.
[23]
The court’s function is to remain consistent with the
legislative scheme and protect the
entrenched rights. Accordingly,
Rogerson posits that:
‘
Courts
should certainly go as far as required to protect rights, but no
further. Interference with legitimate legislative purposes
should be
minimized and laws serving such purposes should be allowed to remain
operative to the extent that rights are not violated.
Legislation
which serves desirable social purposes may give rise to entitlements
which themselves deserves some protection.’
[25]
[24]
The high court correctly found that the appellants’ rights to
adequate housing were not
engaged or compromised. The application to
declare the property executable was brought after numerous attempts
by the respondent
to obtain payment from the appellants, who did not
dispute the debt and even consented to the judgment. However, the
appellants
failed to show how their constitutional rights to adequate
housing might be impacted.
[25]
The text of rule 46A(1) reveals that the rule applies whenever an
execution creditor seeks to
execute against residential immovable
property of a judgment debtor. Notably, rule 46A(2) provides that a
court considering an
application in which a creditor seeks to execute
against the judgment debtor’s immovable property must consider
various matters.
[26]
Given that rule 46A(2) provides that a court ‘shall not’
authorise execution unless ‘all relevant factors’
have
been considered, I can see no reason why the fact that the relevant
immovable property is owned by a trust and occupied as
a place of
residence by the beneficiaries of that Trust should not be one of the
factors to be taken into account. It is also noteworthy
that rule
46A(3) requires that ‘every notice of application to declare
residential immovable property executable shall be
. . . on notice to
the judgment debtor
and
to any other party who may be affected by the sale in execution
. . .’. (Own emphasis).
[26]
It is clear from a plain reading of the entire text of rule 46A that
it is important to have
a preceding enquiry in all cases where the
immovable property of the judgment debtor is used as residential
immovable property.
This preceding enquiry should be directed at
establishing whether the persons occupying the immovable property in
question are
of the
Jaftha
kind.
[27]
.
As I see it, a creditor seeking to execute against immovable property
owned by a trust would have to establish whether beneficiaries
of
that trust occupy the immovable property in question. Where that has
been established, rule 46A would have to be followed and,
consequently, rule 33 of the Practice Directive would have to be
complied with. I therefore disagree with the submission made by
the
respondent’s counsel that the person to be protected by rule
46A is, in the tradition of
Jaftha
and
Gundwana
,
a natural person and not a legal persona such as a company or a close
corporation, nor an institution such as a trust, ‘.
. .even if
the immovable property is the shareholder’s, member’s or
beneficiary’s only residence’.
[28]
Clearly, a blanket approach that considers all immovable property
held in the name of a juristic person to fall outside the protection
of rule 46A is too narrow.
[27]
Due regard must be had to the impact that the sale in execution is
likely to have on vulnerable
and poor beneficiaries who are occupying
the immovable property owned by the judgment debtor, who are at risk
of losing their only
homes. Given the clear provisions of rule 46A, I
can see no reason why trust beneficiaries who fall in the
Jaftha
-kind
category and occupy the trust’s immovable property as a primary
residence (and are thus likely to be affected by the
order declaring
the immovable property specially executable) should be barred from
the protection of rule 46A merely because the
property in question is
owned by a trust.
[28]
In my opinion, the fact that, in addition to being a primary
residence for the trust beneficiary,
the trust’s immovable
property was also used commercially as a wine-farm cannot, in and of
itself, and without any preceding
enquiry, be a bar to affording the
beneficiaries the protection of rule 46A. The protection of rule 46A
should be objective. Thus,
the exclusive consideration of the nature
of the entity in which the judgment debtor’s immovable property
is registered as
the decisive determining factor for affording the
protection envisaged in s 26 of the Constitution as set out in rule
46A would
defeat the very purpose for which the protection is
granted. Vulnerable and poor beneficiaries of a trust who use the
trust’s
immovable property as their home ought not to be barred
from the protection of s 26 of the Constitution merely because the
judgment
debtor is a trust and not a natural person.
The
farmworkers
[29]
As to the prejudice that the farmworkers would suffer through a sale
in execution, the appellants
in their argument go no further than the
bald allegation that they would be seriously affected by the sale in
execution, and do
not explain the farmworkers’ tenure, ie,
whether it was dependant on a contract of employment, or lease or any
other arrangement.
The same cannot be said
about the trust beneficiary in casu, as he does not fall within the
definition of ‘occupier’
in the relevant statute. The
applicability of rule 46A under these circumstances could not be more
manifest.
[30]
The appellants argue that the finding of the high court that service
was not necessary for the
farmworkers and their families is contrary
to
Firstrand Bank
Limited v Mgedesi and Another
(Mgedesi)
.
[29]
The court in
Mgedesi
acknowledged that a new owner would be compelled to comply with the
legislation regulating the eviction of occupiers. In that matter,
the
applicable legislation was the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from
and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (the PIE
Act), and the
court observed that the occupiers’ and tenants’ rights
enjoyed comprehensive protection. In my opinion,
Mgedesi
is
not authority for the appellant’s proposition
.
Notably,
the court found that the occupiers’ entitlement to protection
in terms of s 26(1) will arise in any future eviction
application (if
any) and that it would be unnecessary and an ineffective application
of the law to afford a person protection where
he already enjoys such
effective protection in terms of the PIE Act. Similarly, the
farmworkers
in
casu
already enjoy the protection in terms of the Extension of Security of
Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA), in that their rights to adequate
housing are protected should any after-sale developments endanger
their tenure.
[31]
I find that in the specific circumstances of this case, it is of
significance that the impugned
order was granted by agreement between
the parties, in circumstances where both parties were, from the
outset, legally represented.
When the settlement terms were being
negotiated, the appellants were represented by an attorney, who
happens to be the first and
second appellants’ daughter. The
parties expressly consented to judgment being granted against them,
coupled with an order
declaring the trust’s immovable property
specially executable. Moreover, the appellants have failed to
disclose any factors
which may suggest that, if rule 46A was applied,
the consent order would not have been granted. To use the terminology
used in
Gundwana
, the appellants have not established facts
that show that the matter can be categorised as being of the
Jaftha
-kind. This is because they have not shown that as a
result of indigence, the beneficiaries will be left vulnerable to
homelessness
if the farm in question is sold in execution. On the
contrary, the farm is valued at between R35 million and R40 million,
and the
reserve price was fixed at a minimum of R21 million; the
ability to acquire alternative accommodation is unquestionable. Given
this finding, I deem it unnecessary to deal with the arguments raised
in relation to one of the trustee’s status as a surety.
[32]
To sum up, the object of judicial oversight is to determine whether
rights in terms of s 26(1)
of the Constitution are implicated, and
such determination cannot be made without the requisite judicial
oversight. In the present
case
I find that
rule 46A was applicable despite the judgment debtor being a trust.
However, judicial scrutiny based on the facts of
this case reveals
that the applicability of rule 46A cannot avail the appellants
because they have failed to show that they fall
under the
Jaftha
-kind
category of the home owner. Thus, there is nothing to show that if
rule 46A was applied, default judgment and an order declaring
the
immovable property specially executable would not have been
granted.
[30]
It is for this reason that the appeal falls to be dismissed with
costs.
[33] In
the circumstances, the following order is made:
1 The appeal is dismissed.
2
The
appellants shall pay the respondent’s costs jointly and
severally, the one paying the others to be absolved, including
the
costs of two counsel where so employed.
D
S MOLEFE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
the appellants: J Roux SC
(with J Foster)
Instructed
by:
Thomson Wilks Inc, Cape
Town
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: C W Kruger
Instructed
by:
Van der Spuy, Cape Town
Hill
McHardy & Herbst Bloemfontein.
[1]
High Court Rules of Court, rule 46(1)
(a)
(ii)
as formulated pre-2017 GN R 981, 19 November 2010.
[2]
Uniform rule 46A inserted by GN R1272, GG 41257, 17 November 2017.
[3]
Jaftha v
Schoeman and Others, Van Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
[2004] ZACC
25; 2005 (2) SA 140 (CC); 2005 (1) BCLR 78 (CC).
[4]
Section
66(1)
(a)
of
the
Magistrates’
Court Act 32 of 1944
allowed
the sale and execution of a property without judicial oversight in
certain cases.
[5]
Section
26(1) of the Constitution provides that everyone ‘has the
right to the have access to adequate housing’.
[6]
Jaftha
fn
3 ibid paras 54 & 55.
[7]
Gundwana
v Steko Development CC and Others
[2011]
ZACC 14
;
2011 (3) SA 608
(CC);
2011
(8) BCLR 792
(CC) paras 41-49.
[8]
Mkhize v Umvoti
Municipality and Others
[2011] ZASCA 184
;
2012 (1) SA 1
(SCA);
[2011] 4 All SA 460
(SCA);
2012 (6) BCLR 635
(SCA) para 10.
[9]
Reported
sub
nom Mkhize v Umvoti Municipality and Others
[2010]
ZAKZPHC 20; 2010 509 (KZP);
[2011] 1 All SA 144
(KZP).
[10]
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Saunderson and Others
[2005]
ZASCA 131; [2006] 2 All SA 382 (SCA); 2006 (9) BCLR 1022 (SCA).
[11]
Mkhize
fn
9 above para 40.
[12]
Standard Bank of South
Africa v Hendricks and Another and Related Cases
[2018] ZAWCHC 175
;
[2019] 1 All SA 839
(WCC);
2019 (2) SA 620
(WCC)
para 68.
[13]
Camps Bay Ratepayers and
Residents Association and Another v Harrison and Another
[2010] ZACC 19
;
2011 (2) BCLR 121
(CC);
2011 (4) SA 42
(CC) para 28.
[14]
Ibid para
28.
[15]
Coetzee v Government of the
Republic of South Africa, Matiso and Others v Commanding Officer,
Port Elizabeth Prison and Others
[1995] ZACC 7
;
1995 (10) BCLR 1382
(CC);
1995 (4) SA 631
(CC) para
46.
[16]
S v Makwanyane and Another
[1995] ZACC 1995
3; (6) BCLR 665
;
1995 (3) SA 391
(CC);
[1996] 2
CHRLD 164
;
1995 (2) SACR 1
para 9.
[17]
Lesapo v
North West Agricultural Bank and Another
[1999]
ZACC 16
;
2000 (1) SA 409
;
1999 (12) BCLR 1420
.
[18]
Investec Banks Limited v
Fraser NO and Another
[2020] ZAGPJHC 107;
2020 (6) SA 211
(GJ) para 39.
[19]
Mkhize
fn
8 above para 10 (SCA judgment).
[20]
Karpakis v Mutual and
Federal Insurance Co Ltd
1991 (3) SA 489
(O) at 492F.
[21]
Jaftha
fn 3 para 29.
[22]
Mkhize v Mvoti
fn
8 para 18. See
Jaftha
fn 3 paras 42-43 and 55.
[23]
Mkhize
fn 8 paras 20, 24 and 26.
[24]
‘Bill of Rights Jurisprudence’ 2005
Annual
Survey of South African Law
27 at 77 to 81 and 87.
[25]
C Rogerson ‘The Judicial Search for Appropriate Remedies under
the Charter: The Examples of overbreadth and Vagueness’
in
Robert J Sharpe (ed)
Charter
Litigation
(1987) 233 at
288 cited with approval in the Supreme Court of Canada in
R
v Schachter
[1992] 2 SCR
679
; [1992] 10 CRR (2d) 1 at 13-15.
[26]
These include whether the immovable property which the execution
creditor intends to execute against is the primary residence
of the
judgment debtor and whether there are other alternative means by
which the judgment can satisfy the debt other than execution
against
the judgment debtor’s primary residence.
[27]
Gundwana
para 43.
[28]
Firstrand Bank Ltd v
Folscher and Another and similar matters
2011 (4) SA 314
(GNP) para 32.
[29]
Firstrand Bank Limited v
Mgedesi and Another
[2019]
ZAMPMHC 12.
[30]
See
Mkhize
fn
8 para 29;
Baloyi N.O. and
Others v Pawn Star CC and Another
[2022] ZACC 10
para 23.
sino noindex
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