Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 203South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Moloisane (2019/38095) [2025] ZAGPJHC 203 (5 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 March 2025
Headnotes
“[p]leadings prepared by laypersons must be construed generously and in the light most favourable to the litigant. Lay litigants should not be held to the same standard of accuracy, skill and precision in the presentation of their case required of lawyers. In construing such pleadings, regard must be had to the purpose of the pleading as gathered not only from the content of the pleadings but also from the context in which the pleading is prepared. Form must give way to substance” (Xinwa v Volkswagen of South Africa (Pty) Ltd [2003] ZACC 7; 2003 (4) SA 390 (CC), paragraph 13). The substance of Mr. Moloisane’s case is clear on any sensible reading of his affidavits. It is time for Standard Bank to address that case.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Moloisane (2019/38095) [2025] ZAGPJHC 203 (5 March 2025)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Moloisane (2019/38095) [2025] ZAGPJHC 203 (5 March 2025)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 2019/38095
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
5 March 2025
In
the matter between:
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Applicant
and
DANIEL
MOLOISANE
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The respondent, Mr.
Moloisane, owns Unit 7[…], F[…] P[…], […]
M[…] Street, Florida Lake, Roodepoort
(“the property”).
The property is bonded to the applicant, Standard Bank, as security
for a loan advanced to purchase
it. On 20 February 2024, my brother
Adams J declared the property specially executable for the full
amount outstanding on the loan
agreement.
2
On or about 8 August 2024,
Mr. Moloisane self-drafted, served and filed what he called an urgent
application to stay the execution
of, and to rescind, Adams J’s
order. The application is embodied in two affidavits, in which Mr.
Moloisane says that he had
no notice of the hearing at which Adams
J’s order was made, and that he had been making substantial
payments – totalling
some R140 000 – toward the arrears
due on the loan agreement since the special execution proceedings
were instituted.
3
I cannot say whether these
facts, if true, would have led Adams J to make a different order. But
they are,
prima facie
, relevant to the question of whether
special execution could have been avoided. They call for an answer
from Standard Bank.
4
Instead of delivering that
answer, Standard Bank applied to strike Mr. Moloisane’s
application out under Rule 30 of the Uniform
Rules of Court. Rule 30
deals with irregular proceedings. The irregularity alleged was that
Mr. Moloisane had not complied with
Rule 6, in that the affidavits
said to constitute Mr. Moloisane’s application were not
accompanied by a notice of motion
setting out the relief Mr.
Moloisane seeks, together with the other particulars a notice of
motion is required to contain. Standard
Bank then enrolled its
application in my unopposed court of 17 February 2025. It sought an
order dismissing Moloisane’s stay
and rescission application
with costs. Mr. Moloisane appeared in person, and confirmed that he
was not, and had never been, represented
by a legal practitioner in
connection with his stay and rescission application, although he did
benefit from the guidance of a
lawyerly friend.
5
Even assuming (with some
difficulty) that Rule 30 can be deployed in aid of an order
dismissing outright an application in which
an irregular step has
been taken, Standard Bank has neither alleged nor demonstrated in its
founding affidavit that it has suffered
any prejudice as a result of
the irregularity (on the requirement of prejudice see
Brenner’s
Service Station and Garage (Pty) Ltd v Milne
1983 (4) SA 233
(W)
at 237G). Counsel’s effort to cure that defect in his written
submissions notwithstanding, it seems to me that there
is no such
prejudice. Mr. Moloisane’s case and the relief he seeks are
clear enough, and Standard Bank is already aware of
all of the other
particulars that would have appeared in a notice of motion had one
been prepared.
6
Mr. Moloisane’s case
for a stay and rescission is yet to be tested. Of particular concern
is whether Mr. Moloisane’s
efforts to make good on his arrears
would have earned him a postponement in circumstances where the
mortgaged property was not
his primary residence, or whether those
efforts were sufficient to reinstate the loan agreement or create a
real prospect of him
doing so reasonably soon. The fundamental point,
though, is that Standard Bank is called upon to answer Mr.
Moloisane’s case
on its merits. Standard Bank is not entitled
to resort to the manoeuvre of an application to strike out. Standard
Bank’s
application must be dismissed.
7
One further point calls
for comment. In its founding affidavit, Standard Bank relies on what
seems like the high-minded proposition
that the rules of court apply
equally to all litigants. Whether or not that is true, the equal
application of the rules does not
mean treating every litigant
identically. Lay litigants are entitled to the most careful and
sensitive treatment, as they seek
to navigate legal proceedings which
must often seem to them excessively formal and festooned in
unnecessary and ritualistic language
and behaviour.
8
It is a presiding
officer’s duty do all that they fairly can to cut through those
formalities, and to seek to identify the
substance of a lay
litigant’s case, even if the case has not been presented with
the care or precision a court is entitled
to expect from a legal
practitioner with rights of appearance. As the Constitutional Court
has held, “[p]leadings prepared
by laypersons must be construed
generously and in the light most favourable to the litigant. Lay
litigants should not be held to
the same standard of accuracy, skill
and precision in the presentation of their case required of lawyers.
In construing such pleadings,
regard must be had to the purpose of
the pleading as gathered not only from the content of the pleadings
but also from the context
in which the pleading is prepared. Form
must give way to substance” (
Xinwa v Volkswagen of South
Africa
(Pty) Ltd
[2003] ZACC 7
;
2003 (4) SA 390
(CC), paragraph 13). The
substance of Mr. Moloisane’s case is clear on any sensible
reading of his affidavits. It is time
for Standard Bank to address
that case.
9
The application to set
aside the respondent’s stay and rescission application as an
irregular step is dismissed with costs.
Those costs are limited to
the disbursements the respondent reasonably made in preparing
and presenting his case.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 5 March 2025.
HEARD
ON:
17 February 2025
DECIDED
ON:
5 March 2025
For
the Applicant:
K O Moodley
Instructed by Ramsay
Webber Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
In person
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