Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 656South Africa
Nedbank Limited v Niemann (2019/4132) [2025] ZAGPJHC 656 (17 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 March 2025
Headnotes
judgment, which was opposed. Wilson AJ dismissed the application and grated the defendant leave to defend the action. In granting leave to defend, the court construed the defendant’s affidavits generously as he is a lay pleader, in the light most favourable to him. It found genuine prospects that the defendant would be able to demonstrate at trial that sections 129 and 130 of the Act had not been complied with. [8] In his plea, the defendant contended that the plaintiff’s particulars of claim were excipiable as no
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nedbank Limited v Niemann (2019/4132) [2025] ZAGPJHC 656 (17 March 2025)
Nedbank Limited v Niemann (2019/4132) [2025] ZAGPJHC 656 (17 March 2025)
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sino date 17 March 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2019/4132
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED:
NO
Judge
Dippenaar
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
PLAINTIFF
and
SALOMON
CORNELIUS NIEMANN
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 17
th
of MARCH
2025.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
This is a trial action in which the
plaintiff seeks the confirmation of the cancellation of an instalment
sale agreement concluded
between the parties on 2 November 2017 in
terms of which the plaintiff financed the purchase of a caravan for
and on behalf of
the defendant.
[2]
The
background facts are by and large common cause. The conclusion of the
agreement in its terms was not disputed. The agreement
is subject to
the National Credit Act (‘the Act’).
[1]
The principal debt in terms of the agreement was R 334 107.24
and its total cost R456 993. The defendant was obliged
to pay
one instalment of R7683.85 and 59 monthly instalments of R7 615.41
commencing on 31 January 2018 up to 30 November
2022.
[3]
In terms of clause 25 of the agreement, the
plaintiff retained ownership of the goods until all amounts due by
the defendant in
terms of the agreement had been paid in full. Clause
17 regulated the procedure to be taken before debt enforcement. In
terms of
clause 17.1, in the event of a default, the plaintiff would
give the defendant notice of default and propose that the defendant
refer the agreement to a debt counsellor, alternative dispute
resolution agent, the consumer court or Ombud with jurisdiction with
the intention of resolving any disputes or developing and agreeing on
a plan to bring payments up to date. In the event of a breach,
clause
18.1.4 of the agreement entitled the plaintiff to elect to cancel the
agreement, take possession of the goods and to claim
an amount
equivalent to the outstanding balance less the market value of the
goods at the date of cancellation of the agreement.
[4]
It was also common cause that the defendant
breached the agreement by failing to make payment of the instalments
due to the plaintiff
and by 29 November 2018 was at the time in
arrears in the amount of R31 898.09. The last payment made by
the defendant was
an amount of R3 500 paid on 12 September 2018.
[5]
It was common cause that a notice letter in
terms of s 129(1) of the Act was sent to the defendant. The plaintiff
delivered the
notification letter by registered post. The track and
trace report produced by the plaintiff reflected that the defendant
was sent
a first notification on 5 December 2018. The letter notified
the defendant that unless payment of the arrear amount was made
within
10 business days, the agreement could be cancelled and the
full amount would become immediately due and payable. It further
notified
the defendant: ‘
If you
disagree, you may contact a debt counsellor (unless you are a
juristic person), an alternative dispute resolution agent,
the
consumer court or the bank ombudsman to help resolve the matter or to
develop a plan to bring your payments up to date’.
[6]
The plaintiff cancelled the agreement by
way of letter sent to the defendant by registered post on 11 January
2019 and instituted
legal proceedings. The summons was served on the
defendant on 14 February 2019.
[7]
The plaintiff sought summary judgment,
which was opposed. Wilson AJ dismissed the application and grated the
defendant leave to
defend the action. In granting leave to defend,
the court construed the defendant’s affidavits generously as he
is a lay
pleader, in the light most favourable to him. It found
genuine prospects that the defendant would be able to demonstrate at
trial
that sections 129 and 130 of the Act had not been complied
with.
[8]
In his plea, the defendant contended that
the plaintiff’s particulars of claim were excipiable as no
judgment amount was claimed
and that leave was rather sought to apply
for damages. The defendant further contented that it was
unconstitutional that no reserve
price was set for the sale of the
caravan. He further pleaded that a settlement amount of R324 443.29
presented to the defendant
during November 2018, plus interest to
‘the current date’ was the maximum the plaintiff was
entitled to. It was pleaded
that there thus as a dispute on quantum.
The defendant did not persist with those defences at trial.
[9]
Given that the present proceedings pertain
only to the cancellation and repossession relief sought by the
plaintiff, those issues
do not presently require determination and it
is open to the defendant to raise any quantification issues in due
course.
[10]
In his affidavits resisting summary
judgment, the defendant further contended that: (a) the action was
launched prematurely given
his dispute with the plaintiff regarding
interest on the settlement amount provided by the plaintiff (‘the
dispute issue’),
(b) the action had been instituted in the
wrong forum and should have been instituted in the magistrates court
(‘the forum
issue’); and (c) the plaintiff had not yet
responded to his PAIA application concerning whether the agreement
was securitised
(‘the securitisation issue’). Those
defences were again raised in his plea and at the trial and
constitute the disputes
between the parties which must be determined.
[11]
The
forum issue can be disposed of succinctly. The Supreme Court of
Appeal resolved the controversy in
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd and Others v Thobejane and Others; Standard Bank of
South Africa v Gqirana NO and Another
[2]
in holding
inter
alia
that
a high court must entertain matters within its territorial
jurisdiction that fall within the jurisdiction of a magistrates
court
as it has concurrent jurisdiction. That puts paid to the defendant’s
contention.
[12]
The issues which remain are (a) whether the
action was instituted prematurely and (b) whether the agreement was
securitised, being
the nub of the information sought by the defendant
in his PAIA application. Ultimately, this boils down to the question
whether
the plaintiff has
locus standi
t
o seek the relief claimed.
[13]
Two witnesses testified at the trial. Ms
Christel Toweel, a team leader in MFC’s litigation and
defended, secured and relationship
recoveries department testified on
behalf of the plaintiff. The defendant, who was self-represented,
also testified.
[14]
The evidence of the plaintiff established
the common cause facts already referred to. In sum, Ms Toweel’s
evidence was that
no formal dispute was referred to the banking
Ombudsman and that she had made enquiries in that regard from the
relevant department.
She established that no such dispute had been
referred to the Banking Ombud. She further testified that the
defendant did not respond
to the s 129 notice. After the defendant
queried the interest calculation in the settlement figures provided
to him in November
2018, the calculations were confirmed and the
plaintiff responded to the query. The plaintiff further provided a
breakdown of the
settlement figure. There was no dispute raised
regarding the defendant’s arrears. The normal procedure is that
the plaintiff
does not refer disputes to the Ombud, the obligation is
on a client such as the defendant to do so at his election. The
defendant
had all the relevant information to refer the dispute to
the Ombud. If there was a formal dispute raised with the Ombud, the
plaintiff
would respond thereto. The defendant did not need the
plaintiff’s consent to refer a dispute.
[15]
Ms Toweel further testified that there was
a response to the defendant’s PAIA application wherein he was
notified that the
agreement was not ceded or securitised. Despite
being extensively cross examined on the issue Ms Toweel remained firm
that the
agreement was not ceded to any third party. She testified
that if there had been a cession, she would have been notified and
she
received no such notification. Although the defendant was
unwilling to accept that version and cross examined Ms Toweel on the
issue, no controverting evidence was presented and Ms Toweel did not
deviate from her evidence. The registration documentation of
the
caravan reflects the plaintiff as the title holder. The defendant did
not dispute this.
[16]
The plaintiff agreed that the defendant
could rely on the email exchanges between the parties during the
period November 2018 to
January 2019 attached to his summary judgment
affidavits and that the documents would form part of the record. The
defendant relied
on those documents, both in cross examination and in
his own evidence. The defendant relied on the correspondence in
evidence.
It is necessary to set out the exchanges between the
parties in some detail.
[17]
The correspondence commences with a
settlement quotation provided by the plaintiff dated 13 November
2018, in term of which the
defendant was notified that the settlement
amount would be R324 443,29, valid up to 20 November 2018. On 14
November 2018,
the defendant addressed an email to the plaintiff
advising that he did not agree with the calculation and requesting a
breakdown
of the interest charges.
[18]
The plaintiff responded on 15 November
2018, providing a calculation and advising the settlement is
calculated on the Capital debt
as at 13 November 2018 + interest on
the Capital Debt = Appears Outstanding + Arrear interest on the
arrears. It also referred
to certain additional charges. The letter
proceeded: “
Should you wish to
enter into a payment arrangement, kindly note that 70% of the arrears
are due and payable immediately with a
payment arrangement of three
months of the balance of the arrears’
.
On 18 November the defendant responded and disagreed with the
calculation of interest which in his view was only R40 092.87.
[19]
The
following day, the plaintiff responded with confirmation that the
calculation was correct and no adjustments would be made.
The
defendant was requested to state his intentions on the payment or
settlement of the account. On 20 November 2018, the defendant
responded: “
I
disagree, so we have a dispute. Please send me the contact details
and procedures of the Bank Ombudsman’.
On the same date, Ms Rosenbrock of the plaintiff responded and
provided an email address
i[…]
referring
the defendant to the Web for all the details. Ms Rosenbrock further
stated: ‘
The
contents of your mail is noted. Please take note that your account
will be transferred today to your (sic) legal department
to proceed
with the cancellation of the contract for the return of the goods.
’
[20]
On
21 November the defendant addressed an email to
O[…]
as
follows: ‘
I
have a complaint about the calculation of interest on the settlement
amount of my account. It seems that MFCs staff and myself
come up
with vastly different amounts on the calculation. I am in dispute
with them over this and it seeks that they just want
to press on, I
would like to take the matter to the Ombudsman but I believe you have
to get involved first to try and resolve this
issue.
On the same date, the defendant received an automatic reply. The
email reads “
thank
you for your correspondence. Please note that this mailbox is
dedicated to receiving referrals from the offices of the Ombudsman
for banking Services only. Should you have an account query that has
to date not been escalated to our complaints office please
do so via
the below contact information
.
[21]
It appears that the defendant did so as on
21 November 2018, one Cindy Huyzer of the plaintiff responded: “
Thank
you for raising your complaint with us……Your case has
been escalated to relevant division for investigation.
I will revert
back to you as soon as feedback has been provided on the matter
.
On the same date written confirmation of receipt of the complaint was
sent to the defendant, together with the Ombuds contact
details.
[22]
On 30 November 2018, the plaintiff
responded after review of the defendant’s complaint, confirming
the figures provided earlier
by the plaintiff to the defendant. The
letter concludes: ‘
Should you not
be in agreement with our findings and decision, you are welcome to
seek dispute resolution at your own discretion’
.
[23]
On 12 December the defendant responded “
I
do not agree with your letter below. It was not a concern that was
raised but a formal complaint. I still do not agree with your
calculation and will take the matter up to try and get a resolution’.
[24]
The defendant did not in evidence state
that he took any steps thereafter to actually refer the matter to the
Ombud. There was also
no documentary evidence that he had done so. In
fact, in his email of 16 January 2019 to Ms Rosenbrock of the
plaintiff the defendant
requested ‘please refer this matter to
the Bank Ombudsman’. A similar request was sent on 30 January
2019. The irresistible
inference, as confirmed by the evidence of the
defendant, is that the dispute was never referred to the Ombud,
although the defendant
expressed his intention to do so.
[25]
After receipt of the s 129 letter, the
defendant on 16 January 2019 informed the plaintiff’s attorneys
that there was a dispute
regarding the settlement and that the notice
was premature. He responded to the attorneys: “
I
consider this a matter between myself and MFC and I am still waiting
for the bank ombudsman, until the matter is settled between
us I do
not consider you a party to this dispute.’
The defendant thus did not expressly accept any offer made in terms
of the said s 129 letter.
[26]
In response to the defendant asking the
plaintiff to refer the matter to the Ombud on 30 January 2019, a
further settlement letter
and an email explaining the breakdown of
the figures was provided by the plaintiff on 30 and 31 January 2019
reflecting the settlement
amount as R331 364.31. The breakdown
letter reflected the defendant’s arrears as being R46 861.03
at the time.
[27]
In his plea, the defendant disputed certain
terms of the agreement. Those terms were however contained in the
agreement, the terms
of which were common cause. He further contended
that the particulars of claim were excipiable as no judgment amount
was applied
for and leave was sought to apply for damages. It was
pleaded that a reserve price for the caravan must be set. Those
grounds were
not persisted with at the hearing. In any event, they
lack merit.
[28]
In his evidence and argument at trial the
defendant focused on the PAIA request and the attempted referral of
the dispute regarding
the settlement figures to the banking Ombud.
The defendant did not in evidence give meaningful content to that
dispute. The high
watermark of his case was that he disputed the
interest component presented by the plaintiff in its calculations. He
relied heavily
on the correspondence between the parties.
[29]
The
defendant further contended that the loan was securitised and that
the plaintiff had made a request for information under the
Promotion
of Access to Information Act
[3]
to which he had not received a response, thus hampering his
constitutional rights.
[30]
That contention lacks merit for various
reasons. The application was lodged on 8 March 2019, after legal
proceedings had already
commenced. In terms of s 7(1) of PAIA, the
Act does not apply to a record of a public or private body if (a)
such record is requested
for the purposes of civil proceedings (b) it
is requested after the commencement of civil proceedings and (c) the
production or
access to that record for the purposes in (a) is
provided for in any other law. The defendant did not avail himself of
the provisions
of r 35(3) to seek access to the documents. In any
event, the plaintiff did respond to the application via its attorneys
on 22
July 2019. In relevant part, it expressly stated that the
plaintiff had not ceded its rights under the agreement to any third
party
and the agreement was not securitised. The defendant’s
complaints regarding securitisation are speculative and
unsubstantiated
and his arguments pertaining to the PAIA application
lack merit. On the probabilities, and the evidence presented, the
loan was
not securitised.
[31]
I turn to the defendant’s central
defence in the matter pertaining to the ‘dispute’
relating to the interest payable
on the settlement figures and
whether this court is precluded from determining the matter because
of that dispute.
[32]
From the correspondence set out in detail
earlier and a conspectus of the evidence, it is clear that the
defendant never actually
referred any dispute to the Banking Ombud.
After the defendant’s initial confusion had been clarified and
the plaintiff responded
to his complaint during November 2018, the
plaintiff’s stance that it was for the defendant to initiate
any alternative dispute
resolution was made clear to the defendant.
He still took no steps to formally declare any dispute or to refer
the matter to the
Ombud. The defendant’s email of 20 February
2019 shows that by that date no dispute had been referred to the
Ombud. By then,
the agreement had been cancelled by the plaintiff and
the summons and particulars of claim had been served. The defendant
admitted
in evidence that he has never referred a formal complaint to
the Ombud and as such no dispute was before the Ombud.
[33]
S 129 of the NCA provides:
‘
Required
procedures before debt enforcement.
129(1) If the consumer
is in default under a credit agreement, the credit provider-
(a) may draw the
default to the notice of the consumer in writing and propose that the
consumer refer the credit agreement to a
debt counsellor, alternative
dispute resolution agent, consumer court or ombud with jurisdiction,
with the intent that the parties
resolve any dispute under the
agreement or develop and agree on a plan to bring the payments under
the agreement up to date; and
(b) subject to section
130(2), may not commence any legal proceedings to enforce the
agreement before- (i) first providing notice
to the consumer as
contemplated in paragraph (a) or section 86(10), as the case may be;
and (ii) meeting any further requirements
set out in section 130.
(2) Subsection (1)
does not apply to a credit agreement that is subject to a debt
restructuring order, or to proceedings in a court
that could result
in such an order.
(3) Subject to
subsection (4) a consumer may-(a) at any time before the credit
provider has cancelled the agreement re-instate the
credit agreement
that is in default by paying to the credit provider all amounts that
are overdue, together with the credit provider’s
permitted
default charges and reasonable costs of enforcing the agreement up to
the time of re-instatement and (b) after complying
with paragraph (a)
may resume possession of any property that had been repossessed by
the credit provider pursuant to an attachment
order.’
[34]
In turn, s 130 of the Act in relevant part
provides:
‘
(1)
Subject to subsection (2), a credit provider may approach the court
for an order to enforce a credit agreement only if, at that
time, the
consumer is in default and has been in default under that credit
agreement for at least 20 business days and-
(a) at least 10
business days have elapsed since the credit provider delivered a
notice to the consumer as contemplated in section
86(9), or section
129(1), as the case may be;
(b) in the case of a
notice contemplated in section 129(1), the consumer has-(i) not
responded to that notice; or (ii) responded
to the notice by
rejecting the credit provider’s proposals; and
(c) in the case of an
instalment agreement, secured loan, or lease, the consumer has not
surrendered the relevant property to the
credit provider as
contemplated in section 127;
(3) Despite any
provision of law or contract to the contrary, in any proceedings
commenced in a court in respect of a credit agreement
to which this
Act applies, the court may determine the matter only if the court is
satisfied that-
(a) in the case of
proceedings to which sections 127, 129 or 131 apply, the procedures
required by those sections have been complied
with.
(b)
there is no matter arising under that credit agreement,
and pending before the Tribunal, that could result in an order
affecting
the issues to be determined by the court; and
(c) that the credit
provider has not approached the court-
(i)
during the time that the matter was before a debt
counsellor, alternative
dispute
resolution
agent,
consumer
court
or
the ombud with jurisdiction; or
(ii)
despite the consumer having-
(aa) surrendered
property to the credit provider, and before that property has been
sold;
(bb) agreed to a
proposal made in terms of section 129(l)(u) and acted in good faith
in fulfilment of that agreement;
(cc) complied with an
agreed plan as contemplated in section 129; or
(dd) brought the
payments under the credit agreement up to date, as contemplated in
section 129(1)(a).’
[35]
In argument, the plaintiff contended for a
particular interpretation of the word ‘dispute’ for
purposes of s 129 of
the Act. Given the facts, it is not necessary to
enter into that debate. The interest dispute and the defendant’s
expressed
intention to refer the dispute to the Ombud occurred in
November 2018, well prior to the dispatch of the s 129 letter. On the
defendant’s
version, he collected that letter from the post
office on 3 January 2019. The defendant thus did not raise any
dispute in response
to the s 129 letter, nor did he accept any
proposal contained therein.
[36]
The defendant further never raised any
dispute pertaining to his arrears under the agreement. It was common
cause that the defendant
was in default and in arrears and that he
made no further payments to the plaintiff after September 2018. The
defendant’s
default was raised on multiple occasions in the
correspondence between the parties. However, the defendant did not
once address
his default in that correspondence, but merely disputed
the interest component pertaining to the settlement figures provided.
[37]
The defendant had already raised his
dispute in November 2018. He then persisted with the dispute but
nonetheless never actually
referred that dispute to the Ombud. Any
dispute regarding the settlement figures and interest component
thereof provided by the
plaintiff pursuant to defendant’s
request for a settlement figure to settle the agreement immediately
was in any event collateral
to the issues relating to the defendant’s
arrears. Fatal to his case is the fact that the defendant did not
refer any dispute
to the Ombud. In the face of the plaintiff’s
expressed stance on the issue, it was incumbent on the defendant to
do so. His
evidence was limited to an expressed intention to do so
and excuses as to why he did not, which do not establish his bona
fides.
That is insufficient and does not avail him.
[38]
The
plaintiff submitted, based on
Sebola
[4]
that delivery occurred on 5 December 2018 when the first notification
was sent to the defendant by the post office. The defendant
did not
dispute such notification. The plaintiff further submitted that it
was entitled to cancel the agreement by way of delivery
of the
cancellation notice dated 14 December 2019 which was dispatched on 11
January 2019. There was no track and trace report
attached to the
plaintiff’s papers and it remains unclear exactly when the
cancellation notice was delivered. The defendant
testified that he
received the notice in January 2019 but did not provide a date. From
the defendant’s email correspondence,
it appears that by 16
January 2019, he was aware of the cancellation of the agreement. By
necessary implication, he must by that
date thus have received the
cancellation notice.
[39]
The requisite time periods of ten and
twenty days respectively under s 130 of the Act were thus met and
there was compliance with
s 130(1). I am further persuaded that none
of the barring provisions in s 130(3) were engaged which would
preclude the court from
determining the matter. There was no evidence
that the defendant agreed to a proposal made in terms of s 129(1)(a)
as envisaged
by s 130(3)(c)(ii)(b). I am persuaded that on the common
cause facts and the evidence presented at trial, the plaintiff
established
compliance with s 129 and s 130 of the Act and that there
is no impediment to a court determining the matter.
[40]
The plaintiff submitted that on the common
cause facts it was entitled to the relief presently sought, being
confirmation of cancellation
and return of the goods. The defendant
submitted the opposite.
[41]
In argument, the defendant strongly relied
on the judgment of Wilson AJ in the summary judgment application.
That reliance does
not avail the defendant. The principles applicable
to summary judgment proceedings are entirely different from those
applicable
to trials. The fact that leave to defend was granted in
the summary judgment proceedings, does not mean that the defendant
must
succeed at trial.
[42]
Considering all the evidence, the defendant
has not established that the provisions of s 129 and 130 have not
been complied with.
The plaintiff has established the contrary. From
his own concessions, it is clear that he has no actual defence to the
plaintiff’s
claim. In the normal course, and had the defendant
not been in breach, resulting in the cancellation of the agreement,
the agreement
would have expired through effluxion of time at the end
of November 2022, more than three years ago.
[43]
In
his heads of argument, the defendant sought an order that the legal
action was instituted prematurely and a referral to dispute
resolution, to be resolved within 60 days. He further sought an order
that the plaintiff make available all the information in
terms of his
PAIA application and an order directing each party to pay own costs.
There was no counterclaim for such relief. The
defendant is a lay
litigant and he should not be held to the same standard of accuracy,
skill and precision in the presentation
of his case as required of
lawyers. In consideration of his case, substance must take precedence
above form.
[5]
However, that
does not mean that the defendant is absolved from the responsibility
of establishing his defence.
[44]
Leaving aside the technical difficulties
with the defendant’s approach and adopting a benevolent
approach to him, it would
serve no purpose to refer, as the defendant
seeks me to do, his dispute for alternative dispute resolution. The
applicability of
the settlement figures provided by the plaintiff in
November 2018, has long since passed and such exercise would be of
academic
interest only. The defendant did not in evidence even
articulate the dispute properly so that it could be considered
whether such
dispute was
bona fide.
In his supplementary heads of argument, t
he
defendant broadly submitted that the settlement figure was given as
R324 443.29 which was unacceptable as the purchase price
of the
caravan was R334 107.24 and he had calculated the interest at
some R40 000. Such argument entirely disregards the finance
costs
involved and at first blush appears contrived. It may well not be
bona fide
.
The defendant has in any event failed to establish such a case and
there is no counterclaim in respect of this issue.
[45]
As the plaintiff established its
entitlement to the relief sought, it was incumbent on the defendant
to illustrate that he does
not have to make payment to the plaintiff
for the caravan which he admittedly has in his possession and for
which he does not pay
and has not paid since September 2018 or that
the action was instituted prematurely. He did not do so.
[46]
As
held by the Constitutional Court in
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[6]
:
‘
The
Act does not imply, and cannot be interpreted to mean, that a
consumer may unreasonably ignore the consequences of her election
to
receive notices by registered mail, when the notifications in
question have been sent to the address which she duly nominated.
While it is so that consumers should enjoy the full benefit of the
protections afforded by the Act, the noble pursuits of a statute
should not be open to abuse by individuals who seek to exercise those
protections unreasonably or in bad faith’.
[47]
This
is apposite to the present case. Upholding the defendant’s
complaint would only allow him to abuse the protection the
Act
afforded to consumers and to escape his contractual obligations. It
would truly be an abject case of placing form over substance.
The
courts cannot countenance such conduct.
[7]
Whilst flagrantly discounting his breach of the agreement, the
defendant raised a dispute, not pertaining to his arrears, but to
the
interest component of a settlement figure provided by the plaintiff.
That does not satisfy the requirements.
[48]
In my view, the plaintiff has established
its entitlement to the relief sought, based on the common cause
facts. Costs follow the
result. The plaintiff sought costs on scale
B. Considering the issues, such scale is justified.
[49]
In the result, the following order is
granted:
[1] The cancellation of
the agreement is confirmed;
[2] The defendant is
directed to return the goods described as a 2017 AFRISPOOR CHEETAH;
ENGINE NUMBER NONE AND CHASSIS NUMBER A[…]
to the plaintiff;
[3] The defendant is
directed to pay the costs on scale B.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
HEARING
DATE
OF HEARING
:
3 MARCH 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:
17 MARCH 2025
APPEARANCES
PLAINTIFF’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv S. McTurk
PLAINTIFF’S
ATTORNEYS
: DRSM Attorneys
DEFENDAN
:
In person
[1]
34 of 2005.
[2]
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd and Others v Thobejane and Others; Standard Bank of
South Africa v Gqirana NO and Another
2021 (6) SA 403
(SCA) para 88.
[3]
2 of 2002.
[4]
Sebola
and Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Another
2012 (5) SA 142
(CC) at paras 75-78.
[5]
Xinwa v
Volkswagen of South Africe (Pty) Ltd
[2003] ZACC 7
;
2003 (4) SA 390
(CC) para 13.
[6]
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2014
(3) SA 56
(CC) para 46.
[7]
Ibid para 56.
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