Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 682South Africa
Potpale Investments (Rf) (Pty) Ltd v Leteane (2025/047232; 2025/048371; 2025/048374; 2025/048376) [2025] ZAGPJHC 682; 2026 (1) SA 247 (GJ) (30 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 June 2025
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Potpale Investments (Rf) (Pty) Ltd v Leteane (2025/047232; 2025/048371; 2025/048374; 2025/048376) [2025] ZAGPJHC 682; 2026 (1) SA 247 (GJ) (30 June 2025)
Potpale Investments (Rf) (Pty) Ltd v Leteane (2025/047232; 2025/048371; 2025/048374; 2025/048376) [2025] ZAGPJHC 682; 2026 (1) SA 247 (GJ) (30 June 2025)
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sino date 30 June 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONSUMER – Credit agreement –
Proceedings
against consumer
–
Section
129 notice – Served notices via sheriff at designated
addresses despite respondents having selected registered
mail as
preferred method – Sheriff’s returns provided clearer
proof of delivery than registered mail would have
– Steps
taken to deliver notices constitute proper delivery –
Deviation from preferred method of registered mail
did not
undermine notices’ validity – No prejudice –
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
,
s 129.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
(3)
REVISED:
NO
Date:
30June
2025
CASE NO:
2025-047232
POTPALE INVESTMENTS
(RF) PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
LETEANE
,
LETLHOGONOLO JOHN
Respondent
CASE NO:
2025-048371
POTPALE INVESTMENTS
(RF) PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
SISIMOGANG
,
NONNY PATRICIA
Respondent
CASE NO:
2025-048374
POTPALE INVESTMENTS
(RF) PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
HANYANE
,
MAGEZI JOHN
Respondent
CASE NO:
2025-048376
POTPALE INVESTMENTS
(RF) PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
SIBIYA
,
BUSAGANI JAPHTA Respondent
CASE NO:
2025-048382
POTPALE INVESTMENTS
(RF) PTY) LTD Applicant
and
LESHABANE
,
MICHAEL Respondent
CASE NO:
2025-050634
POTPALE INVESTMENTS
(RF) PTY) LTD Applicant
and
MAHUMANI
,
JULIAS EZEKIEL Respondent
Coram
:
Strobl AJ
Date
of hearing: 18 & 20 June 2025
Delivered
:
30 June 2025 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 16:00 on 30 June 2025
JUDGMENT
STROBL
AJ
[1]
The above matters came before me in the unopposed court. All six
concerned instalment sale credit agreements in terms
of which the
applicant (the same in all six matters) sold a minibus to the
respondent (different in all six matters). In each matter
the
applicant issued a summons instituting action in which it alleged a
default by the respondent and claimed cancellation of the
credit
agreement and return of the minibus. Together with each action,
pending its finalisation, the applicant brought an
ex parte
application for interim relief asking for attachment and handing over
of the minibus. It is these applications for interim relief
that came
before me.
[2]
It was accepted in all the matters that the
National Credit Act 34 of
2005
applied and the applicant was required to deliver a notice in
terms of
section 129(1)(a)
before commencing with either the action
or the applications for interim relief.
[3]
Conceivably two issues stood in the applicant’s way: Firstly,
section 129(5)(b)
of the Act prescribes that insofar as a credit
provider seeks to deliver a 129 notice at the location designated by
the consumer,
it must do so by handing it to an adult. This the
applicant did not do because the sheriff could not find an adult and
affixed
it at the location instead. Secondly, and this issue was not
immediately apparent to me at the hearing of the matters, each of the
respondents had selected registered mail as their preferred method of
delivery, which the applicant did not employ.
[4]
I invited counsel to deliver heads of argument on the issue and
reserved judgment. Mr Botha, who appeared in some of the
matters
accepted the invitation and delivered heads of argument for which I
am grateful. He furthermore brought to my attention
the matter of
Bridge Taxi Finance No. 5 (Pty) Ltd v Mongala
(9372022)
[2022] ZANCHC 69
(4 November 2022),
in which he himself appeared,
and in which the court found that the sheriff serving a 129 notice by
affixing it at the consumer’s
chosen
domicilium
was
insufficient to constitute delivery under
section 129(5)(a)
or (b). I
am unaware of the exact facts that applied in that matter. Insofar as
they are analogous, I disagree with the reasoning
and conclusion for
the reasons that follow.
[5]
As to the first issue,
section 129(5)(a)
and (b) of the Act
prescribes that a 129 notice must be delivered to the consumer “
by
registered mail
” or “
to an adult person at the
location designated by the consumer
”.
[6]
No other method of delivery is provided for.
[7]
Looking elsewhere in the NCA does not help. In my view, a credit
provider cannot rely upon the delivery methods described
in
section
65
of the Act because
section 65
, specifically
section 65(2)
, says
that it can only be used if no method of delivery is prescribed for a
particular document and
section 129(5)
specifically prescribes the
permitted methods of delivery of a 129 notice.
Section 168
has a
similar qualification and may only be used if not “
otherwise
provided in this Act
”.
[8]
I turn then to what I believe the NCA seeks to achieve by prescribing
the methods of delivery set out in
section 129(5)(a)
and (b) and how
it relates back to the all-important 129 notice.
[9]
A 129 notice comes into play when a credit provider is considering
furthering and/or enforcing its rights under a credit
agreement by
such things as cancelling the credit agreement and litigating against
the consumer. It is of paramount importance
then that a consumer
knows about the debt relief options at his or her disposal and has
the opportunity of pursuing them.
[10]
Due to the seriousness of what is at stake, to me it appears that the
NCA wants the credit provider to go the extra mile
and attempt to
physically handed over the 129 notice, either by physical collection
at the post office, if it is served by registered
mail in terms of
section 129(5)(a)
, or by handing it over to an adult at a location
designated by the consumer in terms of
section 129(5)(b).
Common
place and useful as emails, SMSs, WhatsApps may be these days, the
NCA does not permit delivery in that way.
[11]
Not only is the credit provider obligated to pursue a physical
handover of the 129 notice, the NCA also requires a credit
provider
to prove it. Accountability in relation to the delivery is required
under
section 129(7)(a)
of the Act, which requires proof from the
postal service if a 129 notice is delivered by registered mail; and
section 129(7)(b)
, which requires the signature or mark of the
recipient when a credit provider delivers at the location designated
by the consumer.
[12]
But what happens when, as happened in the matters before me, the
credit provider elects to deliver at the location designated
by the
consumer and its messenger (the sheriff) finds no one there to take
delivery and/or cannot locate a person who is prepared
to take
delivery? In my view, a credit provider who then leaves the 129
notice in a prominent place at such location will have
delivered the
notice in terms of
section 129(5)(b).
I say so for the reasons that
follow.
[13]
The NCA strives to promote a competitive, sustainable, efficient and
effective credit industry, see generally
Kubyana v Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd
2014 (3) SA 56
(CC)
at paras
[18] to [48], 64C – 74G. It imposes itself onto credit
agreements whilst at the same time respecting the contracting
parties’ agreed rights and obligations, so long as they do not
run contrary to what the NCA provides for.
[14]
When it comes to the delivery of a 129 notice by registered mail, the
Constitutional Court has said that bringing the
notice to the
subjective attention of the consumer is not required and delivery is
instead defined as the taking of certain steps
prescribed by the NCA
to apprise the reasonable consumer of the notice,
Kubyana
at para [39], 71G – H and
Sebola and Another v Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd and Another
2012 (5) SA 142
(CC) at
para [74], 166B and para [75], 166D – E.
[15]
I see no reason why the same principles should not apply when a
credit provider delivers by messenger at the location
designated by
the consumer under
section 129(5)(b).
[16]
In the spirit of the NCA, a reasonable consumer would take seriously
the choice of location for the delivery of formal
documents. It is
the communication channel through which he or she chooses to be
addressed and notified. It is a two way street.
After choosing the
location, not only is the consumer entitled to
receive
notice
there, a credit provider should likewise be entitled to
give
or deliver notice there. It would be unfair for the law to insist on
delivery at a specific location whilst simultaneously making
it
unachievable for a credit provider to do so.
[17]
If delivery cannot be achieved exactly as prescribed under
section
129(5)(b)
because the premises at the location are locked, there is
no one there, or whoever is there is not prepared to accept delivery,
this is not the fault of the credit provider. There are no steps a
credit provider can take to counteract it. Borrowing from the
law of
contract, the credit provider has tendered proper performance and is
ready to perform. It has gone the extra mile to ensure
physical
delivery and taken what steps it can to ensure that the 129 notice is
placed into someone’s hand. The only reason
it cannot do so is
out of its control.
[18]
One could argue that, as an additional step, a credit provider could
always come back again another time. But such an
obligation would
potentially be never-ending. In my view, balancing the respective
rights and obligations between credit provider
and consumer, that
would go too far. How often would a credit provider have to return
before it is enough? As a matter of fairness,
where a credit
provider’s rights and obligations are conditional or suspended,
it should be able to remove the condition
or suspension with
certainty. If it needs to take steps before cancelling or before its
claim prescribes, it needs to know what
it must do and by when. It is
unfair for the credit provider’s rights to hinge on an unknown
variable such as whether or
not an adult will be at the location.
Furthermore, there is nothing to say that even with multiple attempts
the credit provider
will eventually find an adult willing to take
delivery.
[19]
In my view, one attempt at the location designated by the consumer is
enough and if there is no one to receive the notice
the credit
provider should strive for the next best thing which is to leave the
notice at the location in a prominent place. This
could entail the
messenger sliding the 129 notice under the door or fixing it to any
prominent place so that if and when a person
returns to the location,
it will be there for them to see. Slid under the door, it would take
a lot for the 129 notice not to reach
the person at the location. The
risks associated with delivering a notification by registered mail
are no less. I would think that
a messenger for the post office
delivering a notification to an address where there is no one to
receive it would likewise slip
the notification under the door. If
sliding under the door is not possible, and instead affixing the 129
notice at a prominent
place, there is a risk that a third party might
remove it before the consumer or adult in charge of the location
returns, but I
would think the risk is small. A 129 notice does not
come in a box that might be perceived to have value; a passer-by
seeing it
would not, in these times I think, presume it to have a
value. It is far more likely that when the consumer or adult in
charge
at the location returns, the 129 notice affixed to a prominent
place would have remained there and would come to their attention.
Again, I do not see the risk being any less in the case where a
notification is delivered by registered mail and affixed in the
same
way.
[20]
Based on the aforesaid considerations, in my view, where a consumer
has selected a location at which he or she will accept
formal
communications concerning the credit agreement and where the credit
provider has taken the following steps to reach the
consumer, they
will constitute delivery of the 129 notice under
section 129(5)(b):
where the credit provider dispatches a messenger with a 129 notice to
the location during working hours, Monday to Friday, with
the
intention of handing it to the consumer personally, or to an adult at
the location who will sign for it; where the credit provider’s
messenger is unable to find a person that will take delivery and/or
sign for it; where the credit provider’s messenger then
leaves
the 129 notice at a prominent place at the location; and where a
credit provider is able to prove all of the above to the
court on a
balance of probabilities.
[21]
In the matters before me the applicant was able to prove that the
above steps were taken and in my view the manner in
which it
delivered the 129 notices to the respondents constituted proper
delivery as contemplated in
section 129(5)(b).
[22]
I turn to the second issue, which is the applicant delivering the 129
notices using a method different to the one selected
by the
respondents.
[23]
In each of the credit agreements before me the respondents stipulated
a business/residential address and, below it, a
postal address. In
each instance the physical address and postal address were the same.
All the respondents selected registered
mail as the preferred method
of delivery by which all notices were to be addressed to them (clause
21.2). Contrary thereto, the
applicant adopted a different method,
namely service by messenger at the location designated by the
respondents.
[24]
A consumer’s choice as to the method of delivery of formal
communications and notices must obviously be respected
however,
whether delivery of a 129 notice has been effected must, in each
case, be determined on the evidence,
Kubyana
at para
[40], 72D. Jafta J went on to say in
Kubaya
at para
[81], 82A that in delivering a 129 notice the credit provider may
follow any method of delivery and whatever is done must
constitute
adequate proof that the notice has reached the consumer. In my view,
a consumer’s choice of method of delivery
– and a credit
provider’s departure from it – must be given due weight
in determining whether or not adequate
proof has been provided. That
said, the court must still ultimately be satisfied, on a balance of
probabilities, that the notice
reached the consumer (
Kubyana
at para [82], 82C – D).
[25]
Had the applicant attempted service of the 129 notices by registered
mail and obtained proof that notifications were
sent out by the
collecting branches of the post office, I would have accepted that
the applicant had discharged its obligations
to deliver them, despite
having no facts in relation to who purportedly delivered the
notifications, that they were in fact delivered
and, if so, how,
when, where and to whom (if anybody) the notifications were
purportedly delivered.
[26]
By the applicant delivering in the way it did, with the benefit of
the sheriff’s returns of service in each matter,
I have
prima
facie
proof of who delivered the 129 notice (the sheriff); where
it was delivered; the date it was delivered; the time it was
delivered;
the steps the sheriff took to try and locate the
respondent personally; why, in each instance, the sheriff could not
do so; who
the sheriff dealt with (where he was able to deal with a
person) and where the sheriff placed the notice in his attempt to
bring
it to the attention of an adult in charge of the location.
[27]
To me, the manner in which the applicant served the
section 129
notices gives me greater assurance and proof that the 129 notices
reached the respondents than if they had they been sent by registered
mail.
[28]
My finding would perhaps be different if the physical address and the
postal address given by each of the respondents
was different. Then I
would struggle to say that delivery at one location was as good as or
better than another. But here the postal
and physical
addresses/locations for delivery were the same and whatever method
the applicant adopted (registered mail or physical
delivery at the
location), at some point a person had to attend at the
address/location and attempt to hand over a document, be
it the 129
notice itself or a notification that a registered item was available
for collection.
[29]
Again, a consumer’s selection of a delivery method must be
respected but where, as in these matters, the selection
has made no
practical difference, a court should take this into account.
[30]
As such, I do not think that the applicant’s departure from the
selected method of delivery has lessened the chances
of the 129
notices reaching the respondents. The method of delivery employed by
the applicant, in my view, was better, met all
the objectives of the
NCA and, on a balance of probabilities, reached the respondents.
[31]
As a further consideration, were I to find that the applicant’s
delivery of the 129 notices did not comply with
the NCA because it
did not match the delivery method selected by the respondents, I
would have to postpone each of the matters
and make an order under
section 130(4)(b)
as to what steps the applicant should take to bring
the notice to the respondents’ attention, presumably
notification by
registered mail. Doing so would, practically, send
all the matters full circle for no reason.
[32]
In the circumstances, and on the facts before me, I find that the
steps taken by the applicant to deliver the 129 notices
to the
respondents constitute proper delivery under
section 129(5)(b)
and,
notwithstanding that the applicant served the 129 notices using a
method different to the one chosen by the respondents, I
nevertheless
find that the delivery was proper and the applicant has proved that
the notices reached the respondents. Accordingly
I make an order in
terms of the draft orders in each of the applications before me.
STROBL AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCE
For the Applicant: JG
Botha (matters 048371/2025 and 048374/2025) and T Steyn (matters
047232/2025; 048382/2025 and 050634/2025)
Instructed by: ODBB
Inc
For
the Respondents: N/A
Instructed
by: N/A
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