Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 125South Africa
Aircraft Asset Finance Corporation (Pty) Limited v Deymine (Pty) Limited and Others (114305/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 125 (12 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 February 2025
Headnotes
an applicant who seeks final relief on motion must in the event of conflict, accept the version set up by his opponent unless the latter’s allegations are, in the opinion of the court, not such as to raise a real, genuine or bona fide dispute of fact or are so far-fetched or clearly untenable that the court is justified in rejecting them merely on the papers.
Judgment
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## Aircraft Asset Finance Corporation (Pty) Limited v Deymine (Pty) Limited and Others (114305/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 125 (12 February 2025)
Aircraft Asset Finance Corporation (Pty) Limited v Deymine (Pty) Limited and Others (114305/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 125 (12 February 2025)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE
NO
:
114305/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
12/02/2025
In
the application between
AIRCRAFT
ASSET FINANCE CORPORATION
(PTY)
LIMITED
(Registration
No: 2003/029134/07)
Applicant
And
DEYMINE
(PTY) LIMITED
(Registration
No: 2017/304226/07)
First Respondent
CORNELIUS
JOHANNES DEYSEL
(Identity
No: 8[…])
Second Respondent
EVERT
PHILIP SERFONTEIN
(Identity
No: 8[…])
Third Respondent
EPS
COURIER SERVICES CC
(Registration
No: 1996/052772/23)
Fourth Respondent
EPS
LOGISTICS CC
(Registration
No: 2010/005466/23)
Fifth Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines the Judgment is deemed to be delivered.
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI
J
Introduction
[1] This is an
application for money judgment. The application arises due to the
deeds of surety executed by the second to
fifth respondents who bound
themselves as sureties and co-principal debtors for the indebtedness
of the first respondent, who is
in liquidation.
Background
[2] The first
respondent concluded three master lease agreements for the rental of
three Volvo equipment and the first respondent
defaulted and was
eventually liquidated. There is not relief sought against the
first respondent.
[3]
The parties agreed that
the first Respondent as principal
debtor concluded the Master Rental Agreements and defaulted. The
First Respondent has been wound
up. The parties also agree that the
remaining respondents executed the deeds of surety in favour of the
applicant for the liability
of the first respondent arising out of
the Master Rental Agreement. The parties also agreed that the
outstanding balance has been
confirmed by means of a detailed
statement; a letter of demand; a termination agreement in terms of
which the outstanding balance
was confirmed by the respondents
themselves and an Electronic Communication Transactions Act, no 25 of
2002 (“ECTA”)
Certificate.
[4] The
respondents have raised several contentions that they aver are
defences. Firstly, they deny that the amount claimed
is due and
payable. The basis of their contention is that when the first
respondent made monthly repayments, the applicant refused
to accept
the payment and did not credit the first respondents with the alleged
payments. They aver that the first respondent suffered
serious
financial setback and logistical challenges and was eventually wound
up. They contend that the applicant did not submit
its claim with the
liquidators of the estate of the first respondent. They argue that
the applicant should pursue its claim against
the first respondent
before it holds the respondents liable.
[5] Secondly, so
contend the respondents, they never intended to bind themselves to
the applicant as sureties for the fulfilment
of the first
respondent's obligations with the applicant. In amplification of
their alleged defence, they contend that they were
never informed of
the consequences of the deeds of surety. They furthermore aver that
the members of the third and the fourth respondents
never adopted the
resolution to authorise the third and fourth respondents to conclude
the deeds of surety. Consequently, so the
argument goes, the third
and fourth respondents never intended to be bound by the deeds of
surety as co-principal debtors with
the applicant and that the deeds
of surety are void and unenforceable. The respondents aver
furthermore that they were ambushed
with documents to sign and that
they have no legal experience.
[6]
The issue for determining is whether the defences raised by
the respondents are sustainable.
[7]
I now deal with the alleged disputed amount claimed and the
principles on dispute of facts. In the seminal case of
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1]
,
the Court held that an applicant who seeks final relief on
motion must in the event of conflict, accept the version set up
by
his opponent unless the latter’s allegations are, in the
opinion of the court, not such as to raise a real, genuine or
bona
fide
dispute
of fact or are so far-fetched or clearly untenable that the court is
justified in rejecting them merely on the papers.
## [8]
InWightman
t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another[2]Heher
JA said the following regarding a bona fide defence:
[8]
In
Wightman
t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2]
Heher
JA said the following regarding a bona fide defence:
“
A
real, genuine and
bona
fide
dispute
of fact can exist only where the court is satisfied that the party
who purports to raise the dispute has in his affidavit
seriously and
unambiguously addressed the fact said to be disputed. There will of
course be instances where a bare denial meets
the requirement because
there is no other way open to the disputing party and nothing more
can therefore be expected of him. But
even that may not be sufficient
if the fact averred lies purely within the knowledge of the averring
party and no basis is laid
for disputing the veracity or accuracy of
the averment. When the facts averred are such that the disputing
party must necessarily
possess knowledge of them and be able to
provide an answer (or countervailing evidence) if they be not true or
accurate but, instead
of doing so, rests his case on a bare or
ambiguous denial the court will generally have difficulty in finding
that the test is
satisfied. I say ‘generally’ because
factual averments seldom stand apart from a broader matrix of
circumstances all
of which needs to be borne in mind when arriving at
a decision. A litigant may not necessarily recognise or understand
the nuances
of a bare or general denial as against a real attempt to
grapple with all relevant factual allegations made by the other
party.
But when he signs the answering affidavit, he commits himself
to its contents, inadequate as they may be, and will only in
exceptional
circumstances be permitted to disavow them. There
is
thus a serious duty imposed upon a legal adviser who settles an
answering affidavit to ascertain and engage with facts which
his
client disputes and to reflect such disputes fully and accurately in
the answering affidavit. If that does not happen it should
come as no
surprise that the court takes a robust view of the matter.”
[9] In its founding
affidavit, the applicant states fully the basis of its claim. It
states how it launched an urgent application
in Mpumalanga High Court
against the first respondent and cited all the other respondents. It
further states what the amount owing
was in terms of each of the
three rental agreement regarding the three equipment used in the
colliery operated by the first respondent
and the fact that both Part
A order which was obtained
ex parte
and later confirmed in
Part B order without opposition was dealt with. It states that the
equipment had already been attached in
terms of Part A order and that
the equipment was sold by an online auction where the under recovery
of the amount owed was R25
million plus interest sets out how the
amount is made up which is supports by the statement of account which
has been generated
electronically.
[10] The answer
provided by the respondents to the application’s affidavit on
the disputed amount is a bare denial of
the amount and an averment
that the applicant refused to accept payments from the first
respondent. They do not provide an answer
with the sufficient detail
to enable me to assess the alleged disputed amount. It
follows,therefore, that the alleged dispute of
facts and the bona
fide defence based on the alleged ground has not been supported by
any cogent facts. Accordingly, the dispute
raised by the respondents
on the amount of the claim has not been established and the defence
must fail.
[11] The view that I
hold is supported by Clause 16.1 of the Master Rental Agreements
which provides:
“
A
certificate signed by a manager or director of AAFC, whose position
it shall not be necessary to prove, as to any amounts owing
by the
Hirer in terms of the Agreement, or any other fact, shall in the
absence of manifest and/or clerical error, be prima facie
evidence of
the Hirer’s indebtedness to AAFC herein.” The respondents
have not provided facts in their papers suggesting
that there was any
manifest or clerical error pertaining to amount claimed.
[12] I now deal with
the contention by the third and the fourth respondents that the did
not intend to be bound by the deeds
of surety because they are laymen
with no knowledge or understanding of the law.
[13] In
George
v
Fairmead
[3]
the
Appellate Division had an opportunity to deal with the contention
where the party raised a contention that he was not bound
by what is
contained in the agreement as a guest of the hotel because he had
concluded a separate agreement with one official of
the hotel he was
staying which did not limit the hotel’s liability to him. Fagan
CJ, accepted what Innes CJ said in
Burger
v.
Central
South African Railways
,
[4]
that:
“
It
is a sound principle of law that a man, when he signs a contract, is
taken to be bound by the ordinary meaning and effect of
the words
which appear over his signature. There are, of course, grounds upon
which he may repudiate a document to which he had
put his hand. But
no such grounds have been shown to exist in the present case.
Consider the circumstances under which this note
was signed. Neither
fraud nor misrepresentation has been alleged; nothing was said by any
railway official which misled the signatory;
the language of the
document was one which the consignor understood; no pressure of any
kind was exercised. All that can be said
is that the consignor did
not choose to read what he was signing, and after he had signed did
not know the particulars of the regulations
by which he had agreed to
abide. For the Court to hold upon these facts that the appellant is
legally justified in repudiating
his signature would be a decision
involving far-reaching consequences, and it would be a principle
unsupported by any principle
of our law. The mistake or error of the
signatory in the present case was not such
justus error
as
would entitle him to claim a
restitutio in integrum
, or
as could be successfully pleaded as a defence to an action founded
upon the written contract, and therefore it cannot be used
for the
purpose of attacking that contract when the railway seeks to rely
upon it.” This has been the law of our Republic
and various
courts judgments have not suggested the departure from this
principle. Accordingly, there is no merit to suggest that
a person
can sign an agreement without an intention to be bound by the terms
thereof.
[14] It
is trite that a contract of suretyship is accessary to the
contractual relationship between the principal debtor and
the
creditor.
[5]
In this regard,
Wallis JA in
Van
Zyl v
Auto
Commodities
(Pty)Ltd
[6]
said
the following:
“
[11]
A contract of suretyship is distinct from the contract or contracts
between the principal debtor and the creditor that give
rise to the
principal indebtedness, but it is accessory to that contractual
relationship and the principal debtor's obligations
under it. Subject
to any specific limitation, such as a suretyship in a limited amount,
the surety’s obligations are coterminous
with those of the
principal debtor. Where the surety signs as co-principal debtor, as
Mr van Zyl did, the addition of those words
shows that the surety is
assuming the same obligations as the principal debtor. In other
words, the obligation of the surety is
the same as that of the
principal debtor.
[7]
It
follows from the accessory nature of the surety’s undertaking
that the liability of the surety is dependent on the
obligations of
the principal debtor.
[8]
[12]
A consequence of this is that if the principal debtor’s debt is
discharged, whether by payment or release, the
surety’s
obligation is likewise discharged.
[9]
If the principal debtor’s obligation is reduced by compromise
the surety’s obligation is likewise reduced. If the principal
debtor is afforded time to pay that enures for the benefit of the
surety.
[10]
If the claim
against the principal debtor prescribes so does the claim against the
surety.
[11]
This will be
subject to any terms of the deed of suretyship that preserve the
surety's liability notwithstanding the release
or discharge of, or
any other benefit or remission afforded to, the principal debtor.”
[13]
Although
a principal debtor’s discharge from liability ordinarily
releases the debtor’s surety, the accessory nature
of a
surety’s liability is not so rigidly applied in our law as to
preclude some derogation by way of agreement between the
creditor and
the surety.
[12]
As will be
shown below, the terms of the Deed of Surety are an important
consideration.
[14] The respondents
have also argued that the applicant must first file its claim against
the estate of the first respondent
and if it does not achieve the
full recovery, only then can it claim against the respondents. This
is a common law exception of
excussion. Absent any agreement to the
contrary, the respondents would, in principle, be correct. To test if
this is correct, regard
should be had to the terms of the Deeds of
Surety.
[15] Page two of the
Deeds of Surety and paragraph two thereof provide as follows:
“
The
Surety
hereby
renounces the benefit of legal exceptions of excussion and division,
with the force and meaning whereof I acknowledge the
Surety
to be fully acquainted. The Surety waives and abandons any right it
might otherwise have had to rely on prescription of any obligation
of
the
Principal Debtor
or
of itself to the
Creditor
,and
the
Surety
undertakes not to raise prescription as a defence to any claim
brought against it by the
Creditor
pursuant to this deed. The
Surety
shall be bound by this deed whether or not any other intended surety
becomes such.”
[16] The effect of
the paragraph referred above is that the right to raise the defence
as the respondents sought to do has
been waived as agreed between the
parties. The Court has no basis to interfere with what the parties to
the Deeds of Surety agreed
upon.
[17] In
Neon
and Cold Cathode Illuminations (Pty) Ltd v Ephron
[13]
the issue for determination was
whether
the appellant’s right of action against respondent, a surety
and co-principal debtor, became prescribed under the
Prescription
Act,
18
of 1943. Before the Court considered the issue it restated the law on
suretyship to be as follows:
“
From
the above and other authorities it appears that generally the only
consequence (albeit an important one) that flows from a
surety also
under-taking liability as a co-principal debtor is that
vis-à-vis
the
creditor he thereby tacitly renounces the ordinary benefits available
to a surety, such as those of excussion and division,
and he becomes
liable jointly and severally with the principal debtor (see, for
example, Caney,
Law
of Suretyship
,
2nd ed., p. 51; Wessels on
Contract
,
2nd ed., paras. 4087, 4088, and 4124;
Voet
,
46.1.16 and 24 (
Gane’s
trans.,
vol. 7, pp. 38-9, 48-9); Pothier on
Obligations
,
paras. 408, 416 (
Evans
’
trans., pp. 330, 335-6). However, he retains the right, on paying the
creditor, to obtain a cession of the latter’s
rights and
securities in order to recover the full amount from the principal
debtor (
Caney,
supra
at
p. 52;
Kotze
v.
Meyer
,
1
Menz. 466
;
In
re Deneys,
3
Menz. 309
;
Business
Buying and Investment Co. Ltd.
v.
Linaae
,
1959 (3) S.A. 93
(T) at p. 96). It follows, I think, that in the
present case respondent, by also signing as a co-principal debtor,
did not transform
his accessory obligation as a surety into a joint
principal obligation as co-lessee with Benam. As Burge on
Law
of Suretyship
says
of co-obligators liable
in
solidum
(
correi
debendi
)
at p. 394” Although the appeal was dismissed based on
prescription, but the principles underlying the law on suretyship
were fully and correctly restated.
[18] I now consider
another defence by the respondents that the deponent to the founding
affidavit of the applicant has not
provided evidence that he has
authority to launch the application. They contend that because Mr.
Lizemore, who deposed to the applicant
is not a director and that
because his authority has been challenged, that the application
should be dismissed on this basis alone.
[19] Mr.
Botes SC referred me to the case of
Ganes
v Telecoms Namibia Ltd
[14]
as
the authority for this proposition. In that case, the SCA said the
following regarding the defence of lack of authority to institute
the
application/action:
“
In
my view it is irrelevant whether Hanke had been authorised to depose
to the founding affidavit. The deponent to an affidavit
in motion
proceedings need not be authorised by the party concerned to depose
to the affidavit. It is the institution of the proceedings
and the
prosecution thereof which must be authorised. In the present case the
proceedings were instituted and prosecuted by a firm
of attorneys
purporting to act on behalf of the respondent. In an affidavit filed
together with the notice of motion a Mr Kurz
stated that he was a
director in the firm of attorneys acting on behalf of the respondent
and that such firm of attorneys was duly
appointed to represent the
respondent. That statement has not been challenged by the appellants.
It must, therefore, be accepted
that the institution of the
proceedings was duly authorised. In any event, rule 7 provides a
procedure to be followed by a respondent
who wishes to challenge the
authority of an attorney who instituted motion proceedings on behalf
of an applicant. The appellants
did not avail themselves of the
procedure so provided. (See
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992
(2) SA 703(W)
at
705C-J.)”
[20] Mr Botes SC
submitted that because the respondents challenged the authority of Mr
Lezimore to institute the application
and depose to an affidavit on
behalf of the applicant and failed to provide the evidentiary proof
of the authority when challenged,
the application must be dismissed.
This submission loses the principle established in the case relied on
by the respondents. Mr.
Lizemore says he is employed by the applicant
as the credit analyst, and he is authorised to institute the
application and depose
to an affidavit on behalf of the applicant.
[21] The submission
is not sustainable. Firstly, Rule 7 the Uniform Rules envisages the
challenge to the legal representative
to act on behalf of a party. It
does not envisage the situation where an employee deposes to an
affidavit on behalf of the company.
There is no impediment for
Mr Lezimore, as an employee of the applicant, to depose to an
affidavit providing the details
of the claim and its basis. Secondly,
the there is no need for a deponent to prove that he/she is
authorised to give evidence by
way of an affidavit to prove the basis
of the applicant’s claim. It follows that the defence must
fail.
[22] Mr Botes SC
furthermore submitted that because the First Respondent has been
wound up, it ought not have been cited in
the proceedings. He relies
for his proposition on the provisions of section
359(1)
of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973 for his proposition. The section
provides that where the court has made an order winding
-up the
company, all civil proceedings by or against the company concerned
are suspended until the appointment of a liquidator.
[23] The
proposition is the correct one. I have indeed looked at the notice of
motion as well as the draft order and noted
that the citation of a
first respondent gives no indication on its face that the first
respondent is in winding-up. However,
the argument does not
take the matter any further because it was accepted in the joint
practice note by all the parties in this
litigation that the first
respondent has been wound-up. The consequence thereof must be and is
that no relief is sought against
the first respondent. The point has
therefore become moot.
[24] The
prohibition against civil litigation of a company in winding-up is no
bar to the enforcement of the Deed of Suretyship
is the legal
exceptions have been waived. It is not necessary to wait for the
appointment of the liquidator before the enforcement
of deeds of
surety can be embarked upon. Accordingly, as already stated, the
defence must fail.
[25] Mr
Botes sought to rely on what the Court said in
Dole
South Africa Pty Ltd
v
Pieter Beukes (Pty) Ltd
[15]
for the proposition that the respondents were not aware of what they
were signing.
[26] It
should be remembered that
the
general principle set out by Innes CJ in
Burger
v Central South African Railways
[16]
,
namely that:
“
It
is a sound principle of law that a man, when he signs a contract, he
is taken to be bound by the ordinary meaning and effect
of the words
which appear over his signature
,”
has not been changed as part of our
law
.
It must therefore follow that the defence raised in this regard is
not supported by the facts and the law and must fail because
on the
evaluation of the papers, not case has been made in this regard by
the respondents.
Order
[27]
Having
read the documents filed of record and having considered Counsel’s
submissions, it is hereby ordered that:
27.1. The Second
to Fifth Respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved to make payment to
the Applicant in the amount R29 018
132.57.
27.2. Interest on
the amount aforesaid at the rate of 2% per month, from the 13th of
September 2023 calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears,
until the date on which the Applicant receives payment; and
27.3. That the
Second to Fifth Respondents, jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be
absolved, pay the Applicant’s costs in respect of this
application on the scale as between attorney
and client.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBUR
G
DATE
APPLICATION HEARD
: 14 October 2024
DATE
JUDGMENT HANDED DOWN
:
11 February 2025
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant: Adv Clive van der Spuy
Instructed
by: Lanham-Love Galbraith-van Reenen In
Counsel
for the first Respondent:
Instructed
by:
Counsel
for the 2
nd
to 5
th
Respondents: Adv FW Botes SC
Instructed
by: Macintosh Cross & Farquharson
[1]
[1984]
ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A)
at 634E-635C.
## [2][2008] ZASCA 6;
[2008] 2 All SA 512 (SCA); 2008 (3) SA 371 (SCA) at para 13
[2]
[2008] ZASCA 6;
[2008] 2 All SA 512 (SCA); 2008 (3) SA 371 (SCA) at para 13
[3]
[1958] ALL SA 1 (A)
[4]
1903 T.S. 571
,
at 578
[5]
See Forsyth and JT Pretorius Caney’s The Law of Suretyship 6
th
Edition at p38.
## [6][2021]
ZASCA 67; [2021] 3 All SA 395 (SCA); 2021 (5) SA 171 (SCA) at paras
11 and 12
[6]
[2021]
ZASCA 67; [2021] 3 All SA 395 (SCA); 2021 (5) SA 171 (SCA) at paras
11 and 12
[7]
Kilroe-Daley
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
[1984]
ZASCA 90
[1984] ZASCA 90
; ;
1984
(4) SA 609(A)
at
622H-623H.
[8]
Neon
and Cold Cathode Illuminations (Pty) Ltd v Ephron
1978
(1) SA (A) at 470C-D.
[9]
Moti
and Co v Cassim's Trustee
1924
AD 720.
[10]
Tuning
Fork
paras
46 to 49 and the authorities there cited.
[11]
J
ans
v Nedcor Bank Ltd
2003
(6) SA 646
(SCA)
.
[12]
See Van Zyl case footnote 6 above para 4.
[13]
[1978]
2 All SA 1
(A) page 7
## [14][2003]
ZASCA 123; [2004] 2 All SA 609 (SCA); 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA)
[14]
[2003]
ZASCA 123; [2004] 2 All SA 609 (SCA); 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA)
[15]
2007(4) SA 577(C) at 587 where the Court said: “
A
party to a contract who has concluded same whilst labouring under
a
bona
fide
and
reasonable mistake as to its contents will not be bound by the
provisions thereof. In particular, where the contracting
party has
been led to believe by the other party that the contract contains
certain provisions, which in fact it does not, the
party relying
upon the misrepresentations, will not be bound by the agreement. In
this regard it was stated in
Tesoriero
v BHYJO Investments Shareblock (Pty) Ltd.
2000(1)
SA 167(W) at 175: “
The
misrepresentation need not have been fraudulent or negligent. The
duty to inform would or could arise where the document departs
from
what was represented, said or agreed beforehand or whether other
contracting party realizes or should realize that the signatory
is
under a misapprehension or whether the existence of the provision or
the contract is hidden or not apparent by reason of the
way in which
it is incorporated in a document or whether provision, not clearly
presented, is unusual or would not normally be
found in the contract
presented for signature.”
[16]
1903
TS 571
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 778High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 1130High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar