Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 618South Africa
Bidvest Bank Ltd v Wellsted (2023/109082) [2025] ZAGPJHC 618 (25 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 February 2025
Headnotes
in, hereafter to be held by the Creditor from the Guarantor or any third party in connection with the Secured Obligations or otherwise and the rights of the Creditor under this Agreement will not be affected or diminished thereby. The Creditor shall, without prejudice to its rights hereunder, be entitled to release any such additional security held by it.”
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bidvest Bank Ltd v Wellsted (2023/109082) [2025] ZAGPJHC 618 (25 February 2025)
Bidvest Bank Ltd v Wellsted (2023/109082) [2025] ZAGPJHC 618 (25 February 2025)
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sino date 25 February 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023/109082
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
In the matter between:
BIDVEST BANK
LTD
Applicant
And
WELLSTED:
GRAEME-JON
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
litigation concerns an application for money judgment which is
underpinned by the guarantees provided by Mr. Wellsted,
the
respondent in this application. Bidvest Bank, the applicant, is
claiming R11 million. The respondent consents to a judgment
being
entered against him for R7 million but disputes that he is liable to
pay the balance of R4 million.
Background
[2] The cause of
action relates to two guarantees executed by the respondent in favour
of the plaintiff for R4 million and
R7 million for the indebtedness
of ZAR X Pty Ltd (“the principal debtor”) under a
business account facility and overdraft
agreement concluded between
the plaintiff and the principal debtor.
[3] There is no
controversy about when the facility and overdraft agreement was
concluded. There is also no controversy that
the principal debtor has
defaulted to service the overdraft facility. There is also no
controversy that during August 2022, the
plaintiff obtained a money
judgment for R27 million against the principal debtor. The total
recoveries from the principal debtor
amounted to R13 million and as
at 1 October 2023 the amount of R 21.4 million remains outstanding
which the respondent disputes.
It is, furthermore, common course that
the principal debtor is in business rescue as of February 2023. It is
not in dispute that
the principal debtor has not satisfied the
payment in full of the amount in terms of the judgment. The applicant
received information
during February 2023 that the principal debtor
had gone into business rescue. Consequently, both guarantees were
called up in terms
of the proceedings before this Court. The two
guarantees executed in favour of the applicant and their terms as
well as the signature
thereof by the respondent are not in dispute.
Contentions by the
respondent
[4] The
respondent, in his defence relating to the guarantee of R4 million
contends that action was instituted against him
under case number
2021/51095 and was withdrawn without tendering costs and that he was
not sued on the second guarantee of R7 million.
He contends
furthermore that he tendered other securities ceded to the applicant
and that the tender was rejected by the applicant.
He furthermore
contends that when the overdraft facility was increased from R17
million to R24 million, he was required to sign
the R7 million
guarantee and an amendment was sent to him as per an amendment letter
“FA 7” annexed to the founding
affidavit of the
applicant.
[5] The second
guarantee of R7million was concluded on 27 October 2020. He
furthermore, by implication states that the second
guarantee replaced
the first guarantee of R4 million which was concluded during July
2018. The respondent alleges that Mr. Protheroe,
an official of the
bank represented to him that the second guarantee would replace the
first guaranteed. He argues that the letter
of amendment of October
2020 served as a notice to release him from the obligations of the R4
million guarantee. Consequently,
so argues the respondent, there is
clearly disputes of facts which entitles his contention about the
first guarantee to be acceptable
and that the application for money
judgment in relation to the first guarantee should be dismissed with
costs.
Issue for
determination
[6] The issue for
determining is whether the respondent is liable for R4 million based
on the first guarantee.
Material terms of the
agreement
[7]
In order to resolve the dispute between the parties regarding
the disputed first guarantee of R4 million, is important to
consider
the material terms relating to variation of the guarantee agreement.
Firstly, the first guarantee referred to in the founding
affidavit as
“FA 3”, at clause 7 regarding the guarantee provides as
follows:
“
7
ADDITIONAL
SECURITY
This Agreement shall be
in addition to and not in substitution for any other undertakings,
guarantees, suretyships, or other security
held in, hereafter to be
held by the Creditor from the Guarantor or any third party in
connection with the Secured Obligations
or otherwise and the rights
of the Creditor under this Agreement will not be affected or
diminished thereby. The Creditor shall,
without prejudice to its
rights hereunder, be entitled to release any such additional security
held by it.”
This clause is also
applicable to the second guarantee of R7 million which was concluded
during October 2020 and annexed to the
founding affidavit of the
applicant referred to as “FA8”.
[8]
Clause 18.2 of the first and the second guarantee provides as
follows:
“
No addition
to or variation, deletion, or agreed cancellation of all or any
clauses or provisions of this Agreement will be of any
force or
affect unless in writing and signed by the Parties.”
[9] The amendment
letter relied on by the respondent and dated 13 October 2020 and
addressed to the directors of the principal
debtor states, inter
alia, at paragraph one that the Facility amount has been temporarily
increased from R17 825 000
to R24 850 000 for a
period of 2 months. Paragraph two of the letter records that a
guarantee by Graeme -Jon Wellsted
with his identity number therein
stated in favour of the Bank limited to R7 000 000 plus
interest and costs that may
arise due to the indebtedness of the
Customer to the Bank is required. More importantly, the last
paragraph of the letter of amendment
states that the terms and
conditions in the Facility letter dated 17 July 2018, including any
amendments thereto remain valid and
binding in so far as they are not
contradictory to the amended terms stated herein.
Legal principles and
reasons
[10] Mr Pye SC
contended on behalf of the respondent that in interpretation of
contracts, context is everything. He argued
that the purpose of the
amendment letter of the 27 October 2020 was to replace the R4 million
guarantee with the R7 million guarantee
and that extrinsic evidence
should be adduced to determine the context of the amendment letter.
This issue has been dealt with
numerous times by our courts.
[11]
In the seminal case of
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[1]
,
the SCA said the following on the principles relating to the
interpretation of the contracts, legislation and documents:
“
Over
the last century there have been significant developments in the law
relating to the interpretation of documents, both in this
country and
in others that follow similar rules to our own.
[2]
It is unnecessary to add unduly to the burden of annotations by
trawling through the case law on the construction of documents
in
order to trace those developments. The relevant authorities are
collected and summarised in
Bastian
Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v General Hendrik Schoeman Primary
School.
[3]
The present state of the law can be expressed as follows.
Interpretation is the process of attributing meaning to the words
used
in a document, be it legislation, some other statutory
instrument, or contract, having regard to the context provided by
reading
the particular provision or provisions in the light of the
document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming
into existence. Whatever the nature of the document, consideration
must be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary
rules
of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision appears;
the apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material
known
to those responsible for its production. Where more than one meaning
is possible each possibility must be weighed in the
light of all
these factors.
[4]
The process is
objective not subjective. A sensible meaning is to be preferred to
one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines
the apparent purpose of the document. Judges must be alert to, and
guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as
reasonable, sensible or businesslike for the words actually used. To
do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the
divide between interpretation and legislation. In a contractual
context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one
they in fact made. The ‘inevitable point of departure is the
language of the provision itself,
[5]
read
in context and having regard to the purpose of the provision and the
background to the preparation and production of
the document.”
##
## [12]The
case ofKPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Limited and Another[6]is instructive on the question whether witnesses need to be called to
give extrinsic evidence on the context and purpose of the
agreement.
The SCA KPMG said:
[12]
The
case of
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Limited and Another
[6]
is instructive on the question whether witnesses need to be called to
give extrinsic evidence on the context and purpose of the
agreement.
The SCA KPMG said:
“
First,
the integration (or parol evidence) rule remains part of our
law
.
However,
it is frequently ignored by practitioners and seldom enforced by
trial courts. If a document was intended to provide a
complete
memorial of a jural act, extrinsic evidence may not contradict, add
to or modify its meaning (
Johnson
v Leal
1980
(3) SA 927
(A)
at 943B).
Second,
interpretation is a matter of law and not of fact and, accordingly,
interpretation is a matter for the court and not for
witnesses (or,
as said in common-law jurisprudence, it is not a jury question: Hodge
M Malek (ed)
Phipson
on Evidence
(16
ed 2005) para 33-64
).
Third, the rules about admissibility of evidence in this regard do
not depend on the nature of the document, whether statute,
contract
or patent (
Johnson
& Johnson (Pty) Ltd v Kimberly-Clark Corp
[1985]
ZASCA 132
(
at
www.saflii.org.za
),
1985 Burrell Patent Cases 126 (A)).
Fourth,
to the extent that evidence may be admissible to contextualise the
document (since ‘context is everything’)
to establish its
factual matrix or purpose or for purposes of identification, ‘one
must use it as conservatively as possible’
(
Delmas
Milling Co Ltd v du Plessis
1955
(3) SA 447
(A)
at 455B-C).
The
time has arrived for us to accept that there is no merit in trying to
distinguish between ‘background circumstances’
and
‘surrounding circumstances. The distinction is artificial and,
in addition, both terms are vague and confusing. Consequently,
everything tends to be admitted. The terms ‘context’ or
‘factual matrix’ ought to suffice. (See
Van
der Westhuizen v Arnold
2002
(6) SA 453
(SCA)
paras 22 and 23 and
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v Murray & Roberts (Pty) Ltd
[2008]
ZASCA 94
[2008] ZASCA 94
; ;
2008
(6) SA 654
(SCA)
para 7.)”
## [13]
InCapitec
Bank Ltdand
Anotherv
Coral Lagoon Investments194
(Pty)and
Others[7]the
Supreme Court of Appeal said the following about the interpretation
of contract:
[13]
In
Capitec
Bank Ltd
and
Another
v
Coral Lagoon Investments
194
(Pty)
and
Others
[7]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal said the following about the interpretation
of contract:
“
[38]
…
Under
the expansive approach to interpretation laid down in
Endumeni
,
extrinsic evidence is admissible to understand the meaning of the
words used in a written contract. Such evidence may be relevant
to
the context within which the contract was concluded and its purpose,
and this is so whether or not the text of the contract
is ambiguous,
either patently or latently. On the other hand, the parol evidence
rule is an important principle that remains part
of our law. Affirmed
by this Court in
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Limited and Another
(
KPMG)
and
The
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Blair Atholl Homeowners
Association
(Blair
Atholl)
[8]
,
the
parol evidence or integration rule requires that, save in exceptional
circumstances such as fraud or duress, where the
parties to a
contract have reduced their agreement to writing and assented to that
writing as a complete and accurate integration
of the contract,
extrinsic evidence is inadmissible to contradict, add to or modify
the contract.”
[14] Although in
contract interpretation context is everything, it should always be
remembered that it is the function of
the court seized with the
interpretation of the contract to consider whether calling witnesses
would be necessary to give context
to the agreement.
[15]
Mr. Pye SC, submitted on behalf of the respondent that
the 27
October 2020 document provided that the respondent was required to
provide a guarantee for R7 million plus interest and costs
that may
arise due to the indebtedness of ZAR X to the applicant.13 This is
clearly contradictory to the original facility letter
of 17 July 2018
which required the respondent to provide a guarantee for R4 million.
He contended furthermore that self-evidently
the R7 million guarantee
would replace the R4 million guarantee provided pursuant to the first
facility letter. This submission
loses sight of the fact that on the
fact of either the amendment letter or the guarantee itself, there is
no mention of the R7
million guarantee being a replacement of the R4
million. The opposite is true as the guarantee specifically states
that it is no
a replacement of any existing security.
[16]
The respondent contended that when he signed the R 7 million
guarantee, he did not intend to bind himself to the R4
million
previously signed as he took it that the R4 million guarantee was no
longer enforceable. It is hard to understand when
the memorial of the
parties’ agreement is crafted in such clarity that there cannot
be any doubt on what the parties agreed.
It should be remembered that
it is never a function of the court to draft agreements for the
parties. The court simply considers
the contract it is before it and
interprets its terms and conditions.
[17] In the
instant case, both guarantees have clause 7 which provides that each
guarantee is not a replacement of any existing
security. Mr Pye SC
contended that I should consider it appropriate to call a witness to
contradict clause 18.2 of each guarantee
on non-variation where it is
provided that only terms which have been reduced to writing and
signed by both parties would be valid
and enforceable. In my view,
the contention by Mr. Wellsted that his discussion with Mr. Potheroe
that the second guarantee of
R7 million was a replacement of the R4
million guarantee executed during July 2018 is self-serving. I say so
because it is not
business like for a lender with the exposure
increased from R17 million to R24 million to decrease the value of
the guarantee.
It would have made logical sense if the original
overdraft of R17 million was reduced, say by R4 million and that
there was
confirmation in writing as agreed by the parties that the
R7 million was a substitution of the R4 million guarantee.
Consequently,
the contention by the respondent that he understood the
R7 million guarantee to be a substitution of the R4 million is
illogical
and has no factual basis. The alleged dispute of fact is
therefore without merit and the matter is capable of determination on
papers.
[18] My
interpretation, which is based on the terms that have not been
disputed in both guarantees is that each guarantee
was a stand-alone
and could be called up independently or jointly. My view is fortified
by the amendment letter dated the 27 October
2020 which makes no
mention of the fact that the R 4 million guarantee has been replaced
by R7 million guarantee. The attempt to
lead evidence under the
circumstances would be contrary to the express terms of both
guarantees in so far as the variation of the
agreements are
concerned. The contention by the respondent that the reference to
clause 7 of the R7 million guarantee that the
guarantee is not a
substitution of any existing security should be regarded as
pro-non
scripto
is without merit and must fail.
Order
[19]
Having heard counsel for the parties judgment is
granted against the respondent in favour of the applicant for:
19.1. Payment of
the sum of R4 million.
19.2. Interest on
the aforesaid amount at the rate of prime plus 5% per
annum calculated from
date of judgment to date of final payment.
19.3. That the
applicant to be directed to pay the respondent’s costs of
opposition to the
application
.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBUR
G
DATE
APPLICATION HEARD
: 3 September 2024
DATE
JUDGMENT HANDED DOWN
:
25 February 2025
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv A.A.R. Marques
Instructed
by:
Du Toit, Sanchez,
Moodley Inc
Counsel
for the Respondent: Adv WB Pye SC
Instructed
by:
Tracey Lomax Attorneys
## [1][2012]
ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) para 18.
[1]
[2012]
ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) para 18.
[2]
Spigelman
CJ describes this as a shift from text to context. See ‘From
Text to Context: Contemporary Contractual Interpretation’,
an
address to the Risky Business Conference in Sydney, 21 March 2007
published in J J Spigelman
Speeches
of a Chief Justice 1998 – 2008
239
at 240. The shift is apparent from a comparison between the first
edition of Lewison
The
Interpretation of Contracts
and
the current fifth edition. So much has changed that the author, now
a judge in the Court of Appeal in England, has introduced
a new
opening chapter summarising the background to and a summary of the
modern approach to interpretation that has to a great
extent been
driven by Lord Hoffmann.
[3]
Bastian
Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v General Hendrik Schoeman Primary
School
2008
(5) SA 1
(SCA)
paras 16 - 19. That there is little or no difference between
contracts, statutes and other documents emerges from
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd &
another
2009
(4) SA 399
(
SCA)
para 39.
[4]
Described
by Lord Neuberger MR in
Re
Sigma Finance Corp
[2008]
EWCA Civ 1303
(CA)
para
98 as an iterative process. The expression has been approved by Lord
Mance SCJ in the appeal
Re
Sigma Finance Corp (in administrative receivership) Re the
Insolvency Act 1986
[2010]
1 All ER 571
(SC)
para 12 and by Lord Clarke SCJ in
Rainy
Sky SA and others v Kookmin Bank
[2011]
UKSC 50
;
[2012]
Lloyds Rep 34
(SC)
para 28. See the article by Lord Grabiner QC ‘The Iterative
Process of Contractual Interpretation’ (2012)
128
LQR
41
.
[5]
Per
Lord Neuberger MR in
Re
Sigma Finance Corp
[2008]
EWCA Civ 1303
(CA)
para 98.
The
importance of the words used was stressed by this court in
South
African Airways (Pty) Ltd v Aviation Union of South Africa &
others
2011
(3) SA 148
(SCA)
paras 25 to 30.
## [6](644/07)
[2009] ZASCA 7; 2009 (4) SA 399 (SCA); [2009] 2 All SA 523 (SCA)
para 39
[6]
(644/07)
[2009] ZASCA 7; 2009 (4) SA 399 (SCA); [2009] 2 All SA 523 (SCA)
para 39
## [7]ZASCA
99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA) para 38.
[7]
ZASCA
99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA) para 38.
[8]
[2009]
ZASCA 7
;
[2009]
2 All SA 523
(SCA);
2009
(4) SA 399
(SCA)
para 39;
The
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Blair Atholl Homeowners
Association
[2018]
ZASCA 176
;
[2019]
1 All SA 291
(SCA);
2019
(3) SA 398
(SCA)
paras 64-77
.
sino noindex
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