Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 573South Africa
Technologies Acceptances Receivables (Pty) Ltd and Another v Thavalerie Travel CC and Another (2022/11927) [2025] ZAGPJHC 573 (10 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 June 2025
Headnotes
Summary Judgment in favour of the 2nd Plaintiff:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Technologies Acceptances Receivables (Pty) Ltd and Another v Thavalerie Travel CC and Another (2022/11927) [2025] ZAGPJHC 573 (10 June 2025)
Technologies Acceptances Receivables (Pty) Ltd and Another v Thavalerie Travel CC and Another (2022/11927) [2025] ZAGPJHC 573 (10 June 2025)
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sino date 10 June 2025
SAFLII
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2022/11927
(1)
Reportable: No
(2)
Of interest to other Judges: No
(3)
Revised
Date: 10/06/2025
In the matter between:
TECHNOLOGIES
ACCEPTANCES RECEIVABLES
First Plaintiff
PTY (LTD)
SOUTH
AFRICAN SECURITISATION PROGRAMME
Second Plaintiff
(RF) LTD
and
THAVALERIE
TRAVEL CC
First Defendant
MHLALISI,
NONTHUTUZELO VALERIE
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
MAIER-FRAWLEY J:
Introduction
1.
This is an opposed application for summary
judgment in which the plaintiffs claim,
inter
alia,
payment from the defendants,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved. The
plaintiffs seek the following order:
“
Summary
Judgment in favour of the 1st Plaintiff:
CLAIM A
A1. Confirmation of
termination of the Rental Agreement;
A2. Return of the 1 X MY
IP PBX SYSTEM with serial number U[…];
A3 Payment of the amount
of R11 158.64;
A4. Interest on the
amount of R11 158.64 calculated at 5% above the prime interest rate
as applicable from time to time per annum,
from 30 DECEMBER 2021 to
date of final payment;
A5. Costs of suit on the
scale between attorney and client;
CLAIM B
B1. Return of the 1 X
XEROX 7225 PRINTER with serial number 3[…];
B2. Payment of the amount
of R104 009.98; 83.
B3. Interest on the
amount of R104 009.98 calculated at 5% above the prime interest rate
as applicable from time to time per annum,
from 30 DECEMBER 2021 to
date of final payment;
B4. Costs of suit on the
scale between attorney and client;
Summary
Judgment in favour of the 2nd Plaintiff:
CLAIM C
.
C1.
Return of the 1 X ADDITIONAL EQUIPMENT with serial number: Q[…];
C2.
Payment of the amount of R69 218.90;
C3.
Interest on the amount of R69 218.80 calculated at 5% above the prime
interest rate as applicable from time to time per annum,
from 30
DECEMBER 2021 to date of final payment;
C4.
Costs of suit on the scale between attorney and client;”
2.
In addition to their plea on the merits, the
defendants filed two special pleas relating to (i) a lack of this
court’s jurisdiction
and (ii) a lack of
locus
standi
in respect of the first
defendant on the basis that it was deregistered on 3 February 2020.
3.
At the
conclusion of oral arguments presented on behalf of the parties at
the hearing, I allowed the matter to stand down to allow
the second
defendant, who at all material times represented the first defendant,
to produce proof of the first defendant’s
current status. Both
parties were given an opportunity to file additional heads in respect
thereof. Only the plaintiffs did so
on 28 May 2025.
[1]
4.
A CIPC
report was produced which revealed that the first defendant was
finally deregistered on 21 January 2024. In their heads dated
28 May
2025, the plaintiffs indicated that they would therefore not persist
with the relief sought against the first defendant
in the
application.
[2]
Plaintiff’s
claims
5.
The
plaintiffs sue in their capacity as cessionaries of the financiers
(Fintech and Sunlyn) of equipment
[3]
rented by the first defendant in terms of two Master Rental
agreements and a second equipment schedule thereto.
6.
The first Master Rental Agreement was concluded
between the first defendant and Fintech on 1 November 2026. The
second Master Rental
Agreement was concluded between the first
defendant and Sunlyn on 2 November 2017. On 9 November 2017, the
first defendant and
Sunlyn entered into a second equipment schedule
(referred to in the papers as the third rental agreement) in terms of
which the
first defendant rented certain additional equipment from
Sunlyn.
7.
The plaintiffs’ pleaded claims against the
second defendant are based on two written guarantees that were signed
by the second
defendant. The plaintiffs averred that o
n
1 November 2016 at East London, the second defendant signed an
unlimited deed of guarantee (the first guarantee) in terms of which
she bound herself as guarantor and as a principal and independent
obligation in favour of Fintech, for the due and punctual and
complete payment of all amounts due by the first defendant to Fintech
arising from any cause whatsoever or arising from the non-performance
by the first defendant of any of its obligations in terms of any
agreement entered into between the first defendant and Fintech.
8.
The plaintiffs further
averred that on 15 September 2017 and at East London, the second
defendant signed an unlimited written deed
of guarantee (the second
guarantee) in terms of which she bound herself as guarantor and
co-principal debtor with the first defendant,
jointly and severally,
in favour of Sunlyn or its cessionaries, as a primary and continuing
obligation for the due and proper fulfilment
of all the obligations
of the first defendant arising from or out of the terms of the second
rental agreement between the first
defendant and Sunlyn and all and
any other indebtedness to Sunlyn, whether actual or contingent,
present or future and howsoever
arising.
9.
Both
deeds of guarantee contained a certificate clause and a renunciation
of benefits on the part of the guarantor.
[4]
10.
Sunlyn ceded the second and third rental
agreements to Fintech. Thereafter, there was a sale and transfer by
Fintech to the first
plaintiff of the first and second rental
agreements, followed by a sale and transfer by Fintech to the second
plaintiff of the
third rental agreement.
11.
The money claims against the defendants are for
payment of arrear rentals (Claims A, B and C) including future
rentals (claims B
and C) as a result of the first defendant’s
breach of its payment obligations under the rental agreements. The
plaintiff
averred that the rental agreement forming the subject
matter of claim A had terminated by effluxion of time, whilst
specific performance
was sought in respect of the rental agreements
forming the subject matter of claims B and C..
12.
The plaintiffs accept that the claims for the
return of the equipment are not competent as against the second
defendant in view
of the fact that the second defendant guaranteed
payment of the amounts due under the rental agreements only.
13.
The plaintiffs rely on certificates of
indebtedness in respect of the amounts due and owing by the second
defendant under the guarantees
apropos
the first defendant’s liability under the
rental agreements.
14.
In their plea, the defendants do not dispute :
14.1.
The conclusion of the rental agreements by the
first defendant with Fintech and Sunlyn respectively;
14.2.
That the second defendant represented the first
defendant in the conclusion of the rental agreements;
14.3.
The terms of the agreements as pleaded;
14.4.
That the different equipment referred to in the
rental agreements were delivered to the first defendant;
14.5.
That Fintech and Sunlyn respectively complied with
their obligations under the respective rental agreements;
14.6.
That the plaintiffs are entitled to repossession
of their equipment, the return of which was tendered in the plea;
14.7.
That the second defendant concluded the deeds of
guarantee relied upon by the plaintiffs on the terms contained
therein.
15.
In their plea, the defendants baldly deny:
15.1.
Re the first agreement
:
the first defendant’s breach thereof; the entitlement to claim
arrears; the amount of the arrears as at date of termination;
and
that the agreement terminated by effluxion of time. As regards the
certificate of indebtedness, annexure ‘M” to
the
particular of claim, the defendant pleaded that the amount reflected
therein did not take into account all payments made by
the defendants
until the year 2021;
15.2.
Re the second and third agreements
:
the first defendant’s breach thereof; the entitlement to claim
arrear and future rentals; that demand was made for payment
of
arrears; and the amount certified as due and owing to the plaintiffs
thereunder;
15.3.
That the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (NCA) is
not applicable to the rental agreements on the basis that interest
was charged
under the agreements;
15.4.
In their affidavit resisting summary judgment, the
defendants denied that the facts alleged in the affidavit filed in
support of
summary judgment fell within the knowledge of the deponent
thereto.
Discussion
Special plea: Lack of
jurisdiction
16.
In their opposing affidavit, the defendants
averred that the agreements of 1 November 2016 and 15 September 2017
(being a reference
to the first rental agreement and the third rental
agreement which, on the defendants’ version, was concluded on
15 September
2017) were concluded in East London and as such, this
court lacks jurisdiction ‘to adjudicate this matter’.
They further
aver that “
the
fact that the agreements were offers that were accepted by cedents in
Johannesburg as alleged by the Plaintiffs, does not confer
jurisdiction to this Honourable Court to adjudicate on this matter.
The cause of action did not occur within the jurisdiction of
this
Court.
”
17.
It is common cause that: (i) the second defendant
signed the rental agreements on behalf of the first defendant in East
London;
(ii) the agreements, on their express terms, constituted
offers by the first defendant which were to be accepted by the owners
on signature thereof; and (iii) that a representative of the
respective owners signed the agreements in Waverley, Johannesburg,
thereby accepting the offers.
18.
It
is trite that
the
place where a contract is concluded is where the offer is received,
and acceptance dispatched,
[5]
which in
casu
,
occurred in Waverley, Johannesburg.
19.
The
special plea thus fails to raise a genuine triable issue. In
Raumix
,
[6]
a full court considered the amended Rule 32 and held thus:
“
The
purpose of a summary judgment application is to allow the court to
summarily dispense with
actions
that ought not to proceed to trial because they do not raise a
genuine triable issue
,
thereby conserving scarce judicial resources and improving access to
justice....” (emphasis added; footnote omitted)
Defences
on Merits:
20.
The core defence appears to be one of
impossibility of performance due to the Covid-19 Pandemic. The
defendants’ allegations
in their plea, which were repeated in
the opposing affidavit, were the following:
20.1.
Since
the 3rd February 2020, the first defendant has been de-registered and
is no longer in existence
.
The defendants
advised
the Plaintiffs of the
closing
down of the business
and
the challenges designed by the unprecedented coronavirus;
[7]
20.2.
The
Defendants made payments to the Plaintiffs until the company shut
down and requested the Plaintiff to cancel the agreement and
collect
its equipment on the 3rd of February 2020, but the Plaintiff failed
and/or refused to collect and cancel the agreement.
To date, the
equipment is ready for collection;
[8]
20.3.
A
copy of the correspondence sent to the Defendants to collect the
equipment, dated 14 September 2022, “is attached as ‘TT-001’”
(this is in
contradistinction
to that which is referred to in par 20.2 above)
In
addition, the Defendants requested the Plaintiffs to cancel the
agreement as the First Defendant had shut down its business,
was no
longer operational and was not generating any income;
[9]
20.4.
Payments
were made by the defendants until the year 2021
[10]
(this is also in
contradistinction
to that that which is referred to in par 20.2 above);
20.5.
Payments
were made until the deadly pandemic struck the company in the year
2020, “
when
borders and travel was not permitted, which downfall was brought to
the attention of the Plaintiffs and the Plaintiffs were
alerted of
the consent to cancel the agreements and hand over the machines to
the Plaintiffs, this alert was deliberately ignored
”
;
[11]
20.6.
The
First Defendant ceased to be operational and could not generate an
income, as a result, the second defendant requested the Plaintiffs
to
cancel the agreement and collect the equipment as it was no longer in
use. The Plaintiffs elected not to comply.
[12]
21.
The defendants’ reliance on a defence of
impossibility of performance, albeit somewhat vaguely pleaded,
does also not
raise a genuine triable issue.
22.
It is
well established that impossibility of performance must be
absolute
or
objective, as opposed to
relative
or
subjective.
[13]
In LAWSA, the
defence is explained as follows:
“
The
contract is void on the ground of impossibility of performance only
if the impossibility is absolute (objective). This means
in
principle, that it must not be possible for anyone to make that
performance. If the impossibility is peculiar to a particular
contracting party because of his personal situation, that is, if the
impossibility is merely relative (subjective) the contract
is valid
and the party who finds it impossible to render performance will be
held liable for breach of contract.”
[14]
23.
The hard lockdown that accompanied the Covid 19
pandemic only commenced in South Africa on 26 March 2020. I agree
with the plaintiffs’
submission that the defendant’s
allegation, namely, that the first defendant shut down prior to this
date on 3 February 2020,
sits uncomfortably with this fact, which has
not been explained by the second defendant. So too the allegation in
the plea (repeated
in the affidavit resisting summary judgment) that
the first defendant was deregistered on 3 February 2020, a date which
was not
only inaccurate, but as was subsequently revealed,
untruthful. This, together with the defendants’ contradictory
averments
(mentioned in paras 20.3 and 20.4 above) evidence a lack of
bona fides
on
the part of the defendants.
24.
As
pointed out in
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA,
[15]
the
court must be satisfied that there is a
bona
fide
defence.
A defendant is required to swear to a defence, valid in law, in a
manner which is not inherently and seriously unconvincing.
The
defendant must set out in his affidavit the nature and grounds of his
defence and the material facts relied upon therefore
are to be fully
disclosed. The statement of material facts must be sufficiently full
to persuade the court that what the defendant
has alleged, if proved
at trial, will constitute a defence to the plaintiff’s claim.
The court further explained that
if the defence is averred in a
manner which appears in the circumstances to be needlessly bald,
vague or sketchy, this would impact
on the requirement of
bona
fides
.
25.
As
regards the various bare denials by the defendant’s: (i) of the
first defendant’s breach; (ii) that demand was made
to rectify
same and (iii) the amount of the indebtedness owing, it cannot be
said that these establish genuin
e
triable
defences. The allegations are belied by the letters of demand
[16]
and the certificates of indebtedness
[17]
annexed to the particulars of claim. I deal with the denial of breach
of the agreemens by the first defendant further below.
26.
The allegation that payments which were made until
the year 2021 were not taken into account, lacks forthrightness, and
is, in my
view, deliberately vague for lack of particularity. The
plea impliedly confesses to a breach of the rental agreements, due to
the
first defendant not being able to generate income as a result of
the Covid 19 pandemic and therefore having to shut down. No details
whatsoever were provided of the payments allegedly made, whether
‘
until the year 2021’
or
at all.
27.
In
Breitenbach,
[18]
the
court observed as follows:
"It
is difficult to imagine a balder statement of the defence of payment
than that which the defendant had put forward. Payment,
it may be
remembered, is a defence in respect whereof the onus of proof of at
the trial would have been on the defendant He would
have had to deal
with the manner in which he discharged his obligation to pay, over a
period...' or, if it was his case that a
lesser sum had become a
payable by him, he would have had to say why. In his affidavit he
does not say that he paid the rentals
monthly as they fell due.
He
does not say when or how he made the payments relied upon or what
their amounts were
.
What he has really done is to state the
nature of his defence, but not the facts relied upon in support of
it, which were, presumably,
a series of payments by him
. The
defendant does not even allege that he had paid all the rent which,
according to the plaintiffs particulars of claim, became
payable to
it. He contents himself with the allegation that he had paid the
plaintiff all that is due to it, without indicating
what he concedes
to have been due. That, in my judgment, is far less than can be
expected from a defendant in summary judgment
proceedings. It lacks
the forthrightness, as well as the particularity, that a candid
disclosure of a defence should embody. The
impression which one
receives is rather that the defendant was being deliberately vague,
and was leaving it open to himself to
say later, if necessary or
convenient, that although he had paid only R7 000, that was all that
he had owed.". (emphasis added)
28.
As
regards the certificate of indebtedness relied on by the plaintiffs,
a bare denial does not establish a genuine triable defence.
The
defendants adduced no evidence to show that the Plaintiffs’
certificates of balance were not correct. I
n
Trust
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Senekal
[19]
Nestadt
J put it thus:
“
To
the same effect is the opinion of BLOCH, J., in R. v. Mantell,
1959
(1) SA 771
(C), that prima facie evidence if unanswered would justify
men of ordinary reason and fairness in affirming the question which
the party upon whom the onus lies is bound to maintain.... How far
the defendant's evidence need go in order to answer a prima facie
case depends upon the facts of each particular case. Whilst no onus
of proof is cast on him
he
must adduce evidence sufficient to destroy the prima facie proof and
thus prevent such proof from ripening into conclusive proof
.
Merely to cast suspicion on the correctness of the fact or facts
prima facie established and mere theories or hypothetical suggestions
will not avail the defendant: the
defendant's
answer must be based on some substantial foundation of fact
."
(emphasis added)
29.
As regards the NCA defence, no grounds are set out
for reliance on the contention that the agreements are subject to the
provisions
of the NCA.
30.
In terms of the
rental agreements, ownership in the hired equipment would not vest in
the first defendant.
31.
For a lease to be
subject to the NCA, ownership of the goods must pass to the lessee at
the end of the lease
in
terms of the agreement
.
32.
In
Absa
Technology Finance Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Michael's Bid a House CC and
Another
[20]
it was held that although rental agreements (such as the agreement in
casu
)
are usually leases, a "lease" as defined in the NCA is, by
virtue of the requirement that ownership must pass to the
lessee at
the end of the agreement, the very antithesis of a common-law lease.
33.
Further, the express
terms and conditions of the rental agreements do not contain any
provision for the deferment of any payment
or the levying of any
charge, fee or interest in respect of an amount deferred.
34.
Accordingly, the defendants
have failed to establish a genuine triable defence in relation to the
NCA defence.
35.
Lastly, the defendants’ denial of knowledge
on the part of the deponent to the affidavit in support of summary
judgment, is
unsupported by material facts. The deponent averred that
he is the litigation manager at Sasfin Bank Limited. Sasfin
administers
and manages all rental agreements that are ceded,
transferred or sold by Fintech and Sunlyn to the plaintiffs and
performs all
litigious functions in relation to such agreements. In
such position, he has all the files, records, documents and accounts
relating
to these agreements and the transactions forming the subject
matter of the plaintiffs’ claims in the action in his
possession
and control, and in the normal course of his duties, he
has thereby acquired knowledge of the first defendant’s
financial
standing with the plaintiffs.
36.
First
hand knowledge of every fact is not required by a person in that
position. A
s
long as there is direct knowledge of the material facts underlying
the cause of action, which may be gained by a person who has
possession of all of the documentation, that is sufficient.
The
deponent was entitled to rely on records in his possession and under
his control for his personal knowledge and ability to swear
positively to the facts stated in the summons.
[21]
37.
In all the circumstances, the defendants have
failed to meet the required threshold to avoid summary judgment.
38.
The
rental agreements provide for costs to be payable on the attorney and
client scale. The quantum of the plaintiffs’ claims
fall within
the jurisdiction of the Magistrates Court.
[22]
39.
The general rule is that costs follow the result.
I see no reason to depart therefrom.
40.
Accordingly, the following order is granted:
ORDER
1.
Summary judgment is granted against the second
defendant in favour of the first plaintiff as follows:
CLAIM A
1.1
Payment of the amount of R11 158.64;
1.2
Interest on the amount of R11 158.64 calculated at 5% above the prime
interest rate as applicable from
time to time per annum, from 30
DECEMBER 2021 to date of final payment;
1.3
Costs of suit on the Magistrates Court scale as between attorney and
client;
CLAIM B
1.4
Payment of the amount of R104 009.98;
1.5
Interest on the amount of R104 009.98 calculated at 5% above the
prime interest rate as applicable from
time to time per annum, from
30 DECEMBER 2021 to date of final payment;
1.6
Costs of suit on the Magistrates Court scale as between attorney and
client.
2.
Summary judgment is granted against the second
defendant in favour of
the second plaintiff as follows:
CLAIM C
.
2.1
Payment of the amount of R69 218.90;
2.2
Interest on the amount of R69 218.80 calculated at 5% above the prime
interest rate as applicable from
time to time per annum, from 30
DECEMBER 2021 to date of final payment;
2.3
Costs of suit on the Magistrates Court scale as between attorney and
client.
AVRILLE MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of
hearing:
29 May 2025
Judgment delivered
10 June 2025
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be have been at
10h00 on 10 June 2025.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for
Applicant:
Adv JG Botha
Instructed
by:
OBDD Attorneys
Counsel for
Plaintiff:
Adv Mphlanga
Instructed
by:
Precious Muleya Attorneys
[1]
This
was hardly surprising, as the defendants had also failed to file
heads of argument in respect of the application for summary
judgment.
[2]
Once
a company is deregistered, it loses its legal status
as
of the date of the removal from the companies register
and
with immediate effect becomes dormant and/or inactive. Its removal
entails that
that
it can no longer operate in its name as it does not have the legal
and contractual capacity to enter into any binding transactions
because it is not recognized as a legal person. Likewise, claims by
creditors of a deregistered company for debts owed to them
will no
longer be enforceable because the deregistered company does not have
legal personality.
That
essentially means that such deregistered company can no longer
litigate or be litigated against and all the assets within
the
company (in the case where there were still assets held within the
company) are declared
bona
vacantia
i.e.
are considered forfeited to the State. See:
Walker
Engineering CC t/a Atlantic Steam Services v First Garment Rental
(Pty) Ltd
2011
(5) SA 14
(WCC)
As
Rogers J put it in
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Companies and Intellectual Property Commission of South
Africa and Others
2013
(4) SA 194
(WCC)
,
para
61
:;”
nothing
done by the company and no action taken against the company during
the period of dissolution is of any effect “
because
the deregistered company has ceased to exist.
[3]
A
PABX system; a Xerox printer and certain additional equipment.
[4]
In
terms of the first guarantee, a certificate signed by any manager or
director of the creditor as to the amount of the guarantor's
indebtedness, would be prima facie evidence of the amounts of
indebtedness shown in the certificate. The second defendant
renounced
the benefits and exceptions of no cause of debt, revision
of accounts, errors in calculation, division and all other benefits
and exceptions which could be taken to the guarantor's liability in
terms of the guarantees. .
In
terms of the second guarantee, a certificate signed by any manager
of the Hirer or its cessionaries would constitute prima
facie proof
of the amount due and owing by the guarantor. The second defendant
renounced the benefits of excussion, division
and cession of action.
[5]
See:
Cape
Explosive Works Ltd v SA Oil and Fat Industries Ltd
1921
CPD 244
at
266;
Kergeulen
Sealing 8 Whaling Co Ltd v CIR
1939
AD 467
at 503-5.
[6]
Raumix
Aggregates (Pty) Ltd v Richter Sand CC and Another and similar
matters
2020
(1) SA 623
(GJ) at par 16.
[7]
Plea,
par 8 (at 02-252) - re claim A
[8]
Plea,
par 20 at 02-254 - re claim A
[9]
P
ar
17 of affidavit resisting summary judgment - re claim A
[10]
Plea,
par 21 02-255 - re claim A
[11]
P
lea,
par 15 at 02-253 - re Claim B
[12]
Par
21, affidavit resisting summary judgment – re claim C
[13]
See
Unibank
Savings and Loans Ltd (formerly Community Bank) v Absa Bank Ltd
2000
(4) SA 191
(W) at 198 B-C
[14]
Joubert,
W.A (Ed)
et
al
The
Law of South Afric
a
(Lexis Nexus) vol 5 (1) Reissue at par 160, citing
Frye’s
(Pty) Ltd v Ries
1957
(3) SA 575
(A).
In
Unibank
Savings and Loans Ltd (formerly Community Bank) v Absa Bank ltd
2000(4)
SA 191 (W) at 198 D-E, Flemming DJP held: “
Impossibility
is furthermore not implicit in a change of financial strength or in
commercial circumstances which cause compliance
with the contractual
obligations to be difficult, expensive or unaffordable.”
[15]
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976
(2) SA 226
at at 228 B-H.
See
too:
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd; E and D Security
Systems CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC), par 41 where Binns-Ward J cautioned that “
The
effect of the amended requirements for a supporting affidavit is,
however, to require the defendant to deal with the argumentative
material in its opposing affidavit. A defendant that fails to do
that, does so at its peril
.”
[16]
Annexures
“N1”; “P1”; and “R1”
[17]
Annexures
“M”; “O”; and “Q”
to
the particulars of claim.
[18]
Above
n 15, at 231 B.
[19]
1977
(2) SA 587
(W) at 593.
[20]
1977
(2) SA 587
(W) at 593.
[21]
See:
Rees
& Another v Investec Bank
2014
(4) SA 220
(SCA) at paras 10 – 11.
See
too:
Stamford Sales
& Distribution (Pty) Limited v Metraclark (Pty) Limited
(676/2013)
[2014] ZASCA 79
(29 May 2014) at
paras10- 12 where the Supreme Court of Appeal dealt with the
requirement of
personal
knowledge by a deponent to a verifying affidavit of all the material
facts forming the basis for the cause of action,
where the
cessionary of a claim seeks summary judgment against the debtor.
At
par 12, the following was said: “
The
deponent in such a case was prima facie making the affidavit on
behalf of a cessionary and there was nothing in the affidavit
to
indicate that the deponent had any connection with the cedent, which
presumably would have enabled him to acquire this knowledge.
To
insist on personal knowledge by the deponent to the verifying
affidavit on behalf of the cessionary of all of the material
facts
of the claim of the cedent against the debtor, emphasises formalism
in procedural matters at the expense of commercial
pragmatism
.”
[22]
s 48
of the Magistrates Court Act 32 of 1944 entitles a magistrate's
court to grant "such judgment as to costs (including
costs as
between attorney and client) as may be just."
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