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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 641
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Ramodibedi and Another (2024/029976)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 641 (27 June 2025)
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Ramodibedi and Another (2024/029976)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 641 (27 June 2025)
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sino date 27 June 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2024-029976
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED:
NO
In
the matter between:
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
APPLICANT
and
RETHABILE
MATLALENG RAMODIBEDI
FIRST RESPONDENT
NAPO
EDWARD RAMODIBEDI
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and uploading it
onto the electronic platform. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on the 27
th
of JUNE 2025.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
This is an opposed motion in which the
applicant sought a monetary judgment or specific performance of a
settlement agreement concluded
with the respondents on 31 October
2022.
[2]
The applicant contended that it was
entitled to such relief based on common cause facts. Those facts were
the following. The first
respondent and Mr Peter Dikhuba executed
written guarantees in favour of the applicant as security for the
indebtedness of Mendi
Trading and Investments (Pty) Ltd to the
applicant. Mendi Trading defaulted on its payment obligations to the
applicant and the
full outstanding amount of some R4 million became
due and payable to the applicant. The respondents entered into a
settlement agreement
with the applicant for payment of the
outstanding amount due by Mendi Trading. A portion of the funds were
paid by the respondents.
The respondents refuse to settle the
outstanding full balance.
[3]
The respondents raised two defences. The
first, that the relief sought by the applicant amounts to ‘double
dipping’
because the applicant already has a judgment against
Mr Dikhuba for the same debt being claimed against them. It was
submitted
that if judgment were granted against the respondents, this
would entitle the applicant to two amounts of the same debt unless it
abandoned the Dikhuba judgment or consented to Mr Dikhuba’s
rescission of that judgment. The second, raised in the alternative
if
the first defence failed, that the settlement agreement lacks
fairness and is contrary to public policy.
[4]
The
notion that the judgment against Mr Dikhuba releases the respondents
from their obligations under the guarantee or the settlement
agreement, is misguided. It is trite that a guarantee is an
independent, original and unqualified undertaking by the guarantor
to
pay money to the creditor on a certain date or the happening of a
certain event. It is not an accessory or ancillary contract,
not an
undertaking that the principal debtor will perform its obligations.
[1]
A guarantor’s
obligation under a guarantee is independent of the principal debtor’s
obligation and it indemnifies the
creditor from any losses, while a
surety is only liable for losses resulting from the principal
debtor’s breach of a valid
contract. Useful guidance is
found in case law applicable to suretyships.
[2]
[5]
In
terms of the present guarantee, the applicant contracted with each of
the sureties independently and separately, as was done
in the case of
the suretyships in
Absa
Investments (Pty) ltd v Smit
.
[3]
It was held:
‘
The
applicant thus has the right to select which of the guarantors he
will, in the first instance single out to pay the secured
debt. By
doing this he has not released any of the other sureties. If the
selected surety does not pay in full or sufficiently
expeditiously,
the creditor can select one of the remaining sureties. So in turn he
can collect from all and they are only released
from their obligation
to the creditor after the secured debt is paid in full. It is only
when this has happened that sureties can
settle accounts among
themselves….the creditor is not subject to any of the equities
and his chances to collect from any
of the remaining sureties should
not be prejudiced by the sureties litigating amongst themselves
before he has had the secured
debt paid in full’.
[6]
It was an express term of the guarantee
(clauses 1.1.1 and 1.1.1.1) that the first respondent (who signed the
guarantee with the
written consent of the second respondent) and Mr
Dikhuba jointly and severally guaranteed and undertook as principal
and independent
obligations to the applicant the due, punctual and
full payment of all the debts of Mendi Trading.
[7]
The judgment against Mr Dikhuba has no
bearing on the several obligations of the respondents in
circumstances where there has been
no payment in terms of such
judgment. It was not contended that Mr Dikhuba has paid. To the
contrary, the facts reveal that he
is seeking to rescind the judgment
granted against him.
[8]
The settlement agreement did not novate the
obligations of the respondents under the guarantee. The respondents
acknowledged this
in clause 10.1. Their liability was joint and
several with that of Mr Dikhuba. In terms of clause 1.1.7 read with
clause 3, the
respondents admitted their liability to the applicant,
together with interest and costs. Under clause 2.4, the respondents
admitted
that they are jointly and severally liable with each other,
the principal debtor, Mendi Trading and any other guarantor, being Mr
Dikhuba, for the underlying debt (being that of Mendi Trading). In
terms of clauses 2.8 and 2.9, the settlement agreement was an
indulgence granted to the respondents and the applicant would have
been entitled to proceed with legal action to seek payment.
[9]
The
alleged defence of double dipping does not avail the respondents.
Neither does their reliance on
Standard
Bank v the Master of the High Court,
where
the facts are entirely distinguishable from the present.
[4]
In the present instance, the issue of double payment does not arise.
Any judgment against the respondents would be joint
and several with
the judgment obtained by the applicant against Mr Dikhuba. I conclude
that the defence lacks merit and falls to
be rejected. The fact that
the judgment is joint and several with the judgment against Mr
Dikhuba will be expressly stated in the
order.
[10]
I turn to the respondent’s
alternative defence that the settlement agreement lacks fairness and
is contrary to public policy.
[11]
The respondents did not in their answering
papers make out a proper basis for such defence. It was
contended that the applicant
claiming the same debt from different
people, where the first respondent has satisfied ‘her portion’
lacks fairness
and is contrary to public policy. The defence was thus
squarely predicated on the respondents’ interpretation of the
settlement
agreement. That interpretation lacks merit and is not
supported by the text, context or purpose of the agreement.
[12]
Neither the guarantee nor the settlement
agreement referred to any ‘portions’ and no apportionment
between the respective
guarantees was agreed on. The agreements
expressly refer to liability being joint and several. The
respondent’s arbitrary
selection of what a proper apportionment
should be does not pass muster. It is an issue between them and Mr
Dikhuba to resolve
once the full outstanding debt is paid.
[13]
The suggestion that to the extent that the
applicant has not fully exhausted its remedies against Mr Dikhuba,
the enforcement of
the settlement agreement is unfair, also does not
pass muster, given the express terms of the agreements and the
relevant legal
principles already referred to.
[14]
The
Constitutional Court in
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and Others
[5]
made it clear that
pacta
sunt servanda
remains an important principle in our law. The selective quotations
therein relied on by the respondents do not assist their case.
[15]
In
Beadica
,
with reference to its earlier judgment in
Barkhuizen
v Napier,
[6]
the Constitutional Court confirmed the recognition that public policy
in general requires parties to honour contractual obligations
that
have been freely and voluntarily undertaken. This is because the
principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
is ‘
a
profoundly moral principle, on which the coherence of any society
relies’.
[16]
It is not necessary to repeat all the
relevant principles enunciated in
Beadica
.
In the present instance, apart from alleging a different shareholding
in Mendi Trading and the existence of a judgment against
Mr Dikhuba,
the respondents have fallen far short of discharging their onus of
illustrating why the terms of the settlement agreement
or the
guarantee or its enforcement would be unfair or unreasonable in the
given circumstances. The respondents have further failed
to explain
their breach of the settlement agreement.
[17]
If any disputes arise between the
respondents and Mr Dikhuba, they are to be resolved between those
parties in due course. They
do not involve the applicant and do not
constitute a barrier to the applicant’s entitlement to relief.
[18]
The respondent submitted that the
enforcement of the settlement agreement would, to the extent that the
applicant has not fully
exhausted its remedies against Mr Dikhuba, be
unfair, unreasonable and unduly harsh. In applying the two staged
enquiry, the respondents
fail on each score. In considering the
agreement and whether it is so unreasonable on its face, as to be
contrary to public policy,
it cannot be concluded that the respondent
has established their case. The settlement agreement is reasonable.
In considering whether,
in all the circumstance of the particular
case, it would be contrary to public policy to enforce the settlement
agreement, the
respondents similarly fail. They have, simply put,
failed to discharge their onus to demonstrate why its enforcement
would be unfair
and unreasonable in the given circumstance. The
respondents have similarly failed to set out any cogent reasons for
their non-compliance
with the settlement agreement.
[19]
Given the present facts, public policy and
the principle of
pacta sunt servanda
dictates that the settlement agreement
and the guarantee must be honoured.
[20]
The
respondents alleged that they concluded the settlement agreement ‘on
the basis and understanding’ that the applicant
would only
proceed against them after exhausting its remedies against Mr
Dikhuba. No factual basis was however pleaded for these
allegations.
At best they amount to an allegation of unilateral mistake or error
and no basis was pleaded entitling the repsondents
to resile from the
agreement on the narrow basis available at law.
[7]
It is accordingly not necessary to entertain the issue further. The
allegation is further directly contradictory to the wording
of both
the guarantee and the settlement agreement, which militates against
its veracity and cogency.
[21]
I conclude that the applicant has made out
a proper case for relief and that the respondents have not
established any valid defence.
It follows that the applicant is
entitled to judgment as sought.
[22]
There is no reason to deviate from the
normal principle that costs follow the result. In terms of the
agreements, the respondents
are liable for costs on the scale as
between attorney and client.
[23]
In the result, the following order is
granted:
[24]
Judgment is granted against the first and
second respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved for:
[1] Payment of the amount
of R704 095.48;
[2] Interest in the
amount in [1] above at the rate of 9.25% per annum from the
commencement date along with additional penalty
interest of 4.00% per
annum from the maturity date (14 March 2022), both calculated daily
in arrears.
[3] The costs as agreed
in terms of clause 9.1.1 of the settlement agreement, in the amount
of R6 900.00
[4] The applicant’s
costs of suit on the scale as between attorney and own client
[5] This judgment will be
joint and several with any judgment granted in favour of the
applicant against Mr P Dikhuba arising out
of the guarantees here in
issue.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
HEARING
DATE
OF HEARING
:
22 and 24 APRIL 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
27 JUNE 2025
APPEARANCES
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv. E. Furstenburg
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Claassen Inc.
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv. M Yonela
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Mvana & Associates
[1]
List v
Jungers
1979(3) SA 106 (A) at 119E-G.
[2]
Sapirstein
and Others v Anglo African Shipping Co (SA) Ltd
1978 (4) SA 1
(A) at 11G-H.
[3]
Absa
Investments (Pty) ltd v Smit
1980
(1) SA 897
(C) at 902B-E
.
[4]
Standard
Bank v the Master of the High Court Bloemfontein and Others
[2024]
ZAFSHC 164
(22 May 2024).
[5]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and Others
2020
(5) SA 247
(CC) paras 35-37
.
[6]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
2007
(5) SA 323 (CC).
[7]
In compliance with the requirements set out in
National
and Overseas Distributors Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Potato Board
1958
(2) SA 473
(A) at 479G-H
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