Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 593South Africa
Musekwa v SA Taxi Development Finance (Pty) Ltd (2018/27931) [2025] ZAGPJHC 593 (6 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Musekwa v SA Taxi Development Finance (Pty) Ltd (2018/27931) [2025] ZAGPJHC 593 (6 June 2025)
Musekwa v SA Taxi Development Finance (Pty) Ltd (2018/27931) [2025] ZAGPJHC 593 (6 June 2025)
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sino date 6 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.
2017/27931
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 6 June 2025
In the matter between:
MUSEKWA
KUNDWANI
TREVOR
Applicant
and
SA
TAXI DEVELOPMENT FINANCE (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
D’OLIVEIRA
AJ:
1.
This is an application in which the
Applicant applies to rescind the default judgment granted against
him.
2.
The Applicant is a taxi driver that
concluded a lease agreement with the Respondent. In terms of the
lease agreement, the Applicant
was entitled to possess and use a 2017
Toyota Quantum Sesfikile 16-Seater Diesel (“
the Quantum
”)
against payment of an agreed monthly instalment for a period of 64
months. Upon payment of all instalments and other amounts
owed under
the agreement, the Respondent would be entitled to purchase the
Quantum from the Respondent for R 100.
3.
In May and June 2017, the Applicant
repeatedly defaulted on payment of the monthly instalments owed under
the lease agreement. The
Respondent duly delivered notice of breach
by registered post to the Applicant’s chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
.
When the Applicant failed to respond, the Respondent elected to
cancel the agreement and serve summons. The summons was also served
on the Applicant’s chosen
domicilum
.
4.
For reasons that are not well explained by
the Applicant in the application, the notice of breach and the
summons did not come to
the Applicant’s attention despite that
the Applicant’s chosen
domicilum
was his residence. When the Applicant
failed to react to the summons, the Respondent applied to the
registrar for default judgment
in terms of Rule 31(5) for orders
confirming the cancellation of the agreement and directing that the
Applicant return the Quantum
to the Respondent. Default judgment was
granted by the registrar on 20 September 2017.
5.
The Applicant learnt that default judgment
had been granted against him on 16 July 2018, when the sheriff
took possession of
the Quantum under writ of execution.
6.
The Applicant launched the application for
rescission on 29 April 2022. The application is opposed by the
Respondent.
7.
The Applicant applies to rescind the
default judgment in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) on the basis that the
default judgment was erroneously
sought or erroneously granted by the
registrar.
8.
The
purpose of Rule 42 is “
to
correct expeditiously an obviously wrong judgment or order
”
(
Bakoven
Ltd v G J Howes (Pty) Ltd
1992
(2) SA 466 (E)
at
471E–F).
9.
In order to be successful in a rescission
in terms of Rule 42, an Applicant must satisfy two requirements.
First, the Applicant
must bring the application within a reasonable
time. Second, the Applicant must make out one of the grounds
enumerated in Rule
42(1).
10.
I am unable to find that the Applicant has
satisfied the first requirement. The application was brought 3 years
and 9 months after
the Applicant acquired knowledge of the default
judgment, and the explanation for the delay is
prima
facie
inadequate.
11.
Nevertheless, even if I were to overlook
the inadequacy of the Applicant’s explanation and assume in
favour of the Applicant
that he has satisfied the first requirement,
it seems to me that he has not made out a case in terms of
Rule 42(1)(a).
12.
There are two lines of authority giving
content to the ground of rescission contained in Rule 42(1)(a).
13.
The
first line of authority holds that Rule 42(1)(a) is only available in
cases where an Applicant was not procedurally entitled
to the order
(See
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev Developments (Pty) Ltd
2007
(6) SA 87 (SCA)
and the cases following it). According to this line, a judgment to
which a party is procedurally entitled cannot be considered
to have
been granted erroneously within the meaning of this subrule by reason
of facts of which the court was unaware at the time
of granting the
judgment (see
Lodhi
at
95D-F). Since the Applicant does not claim that Respondent failed to
duly deliver notice of breach or duly serve the summons,
he is not
entitled to a rescission according to the first line of authority.
14.
The
second line of authority holds that a judgment is erroneously sought
or erroneously granted if there existed at the time of
the judgment a
fact of which the court was unaware, which would have precluded the
granting of the judgment and which would have
induced the court, if
aware of it, not to grant the judgment (see
Nyingwa
v Moolman NO
1993
(2) SA 508
(Tk)
and
cases referred to therein).
15.
The Applicant sought to make a case under
the second line of authority.
16.
In this regard, the facts are as follows:
16.1.
In May and June 2017, the Applicant
defaulted on payment of monthly instalments.
16.2.
On 10 July 2017, the Respondent delivered
notice of breach by registered post.
16.3.
On 16 August 2017, the Respondent caused
summons to be served in which its election to cancel the agreement
was recorded.
16.4.
On 24 August 2017, the Applicant was
hi-jacked and dispossessed of the Quantum. The Applicant immediately
notified the Respondent
that he had suffered a hi-jacking and the
Quantum had been stolen. The Applicant also lodged an insurance claim
with a short-term
insurer that is a sister company of the Respondent.
16.5.
Despite having been notified of the
hi-jacking and dispossession of the Respondent, the Respondent
applied to the registrar for
default judgment. In so doing, the
Respondent did not disclose to the registrar, that the Applicant had
suffered a high-jacking
and that the Quantum was not in his
possession. The Respondent also did not disclose to the registrar
that the Applicant was comprehensively
insured.
16.6.
Default judgment was granted by the
registrar on 20 September 2017.
16.7.
On 5 January 2018, the Quantum was
recovered by the police and possession of the Quantum was restored to
the Applicant.
16.8.
On 16 July 2018, the sheriff took
possession of the Quantum under writ of execution.
17.
The Applicant submits that the fact that he
had been hi-jacked and was no longer in possession of the Quantum,
and the fact that
he was comprehensively insured, were material facts
that the Respondent should have brought to the attention of the
registrar.
He submits that the failure of the Respondent to disclose
these facts caused the default judgment to be erroneously sought and
erroneously granted.
18.
The question, then, is whether the
disclosure of the above undisclosed facts would have precluded the
granting of the judgment and
would have induced the registrar not to
grant the judgment.
19.
In my view, this question is to be answered
in the negative.
20.
The orders sought and obtained by the
Respondent by default were as follows:
20.1.
order one, confirmation that the Respondent
had terminated the lease agreement;
20.2.
order two, an order directing the Applicant
to return the Quantum to the Respondent forthwith; and
20.3.
order three, costs of R 200 plus sheriff’s
fees.
21.
It is clear that the facts that the
Applicant had been hi-jacked an was no longer in possession of the
Quantum or had insurance,
were irrelevant to, and had no impact on,
the Respondent’s cause of action.
22.
By the time summons was served, the
Applicant had breached the agreement, the Respondent had duly given
notice of breach, the Applicant
had failed to remedy his breach, and
the Respondent had cancelled the agreement.
23.
Disclosure of the above facts would not
have precluded the granting of orders one and three, nor induced the
registrar not to grant
these orders.
24.
But the same can be said also of order two.
25.
Order two, the order directing the
Respondent to return the Quantum to the Respondent, was an order in
consequence of, and ancillary
to, the order confirming the
termination of the lease agreement.
26.
It was because the agreement had been
terminated, that the Applicant was no longer entitled to possess and
use the Quantum. And
it was because the agreement had been
terminated, that the Respondent was liable to return the Quantum to
the Applicant.
27.
The fact that the Applicant had been
dispossessed of the Quantum, or had insurance, did not mean that the
Respondent was entitled
to possess the Quantum, or was not liable to
return the Quantum to the Respondent.
28.
The fact that the Applicant was physically
unable to return the Quantum because of the hi-jacking at the time
default judgment was
taken, therefore did not preclude the granting
of order two. Nor can it be said that disclosure of this fact would
have induced
the registrar not to grant order two. The same is true
of the fact that the Applicant had insurance.
29.
It can also not be said that the disclosure
of the fact that the Quantum had been hi-jacked, or the fact that the
Applicant had
insurance, would have induced the registrar not to
grant the order for another related reason. This is that a vehicle
that has
been hi-jacked may well in the ordinary course, due to
vehicle tracking and law enforcement, be recovered and returned to
the driver
or owner of the vehicle. The default judgment had to cater
for that possibility since the consequence of order one was that the
Respondent no longer had the right to possess and use the Quantum.
And it so happens order two operated in precisely that way in
this
instance. The Quantum was subsequently recovered and restored to the
Applicant, who was not entitled to possess and use the
Quantum. The
sheriff then rightly deprived the Applicant of possession under writ
of execution on the strength of order two.
30.
Accordingly, the Applicant’s claim
for rescission of the default judgment under Rule 42(1)(a) falls to
be dismissed.
31.
For the sake of completeness, I record that
I have considered whether the Applicant would be entitled to a
rescission under Rule
31 or at common law. The conclusion I have come
to is that the Applicant is not so entitled. The Applicant has no
bona fide
defence to the cause of action contained in the summons, and is thus
unable to show good cause.
32.
In the circumstances, the following order
is made:
“
The
application is dismissed with costs
.”
A
J D’OLIVEIRA
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
2 June 2025
DECIDED
ON:
6 June 2025
For
the Applicant:
P Springveldt
Instructed
by
GW Mashele Attorneys
For the Respondent:
R Stevenson
Instructed by Marie-Lou
Bester Inc
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