Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 33South Africa
Nedbank Limited v Mashaba (2023/0345755; 2023/047197; 2023/047199; 2023/048901; 2023/053583; 2023/059144) [2024] ZAGPJHC 33; 2024 (3) SA 155 (GJ) (12 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nedbank Limited v Mashaba (2023/0345755; 2023/047197; 2023/047199; 2023/048901; 2023/053583; 2023/059144) [2024] ZAGPJHC 33; 2024 (3) SA 155 (GJ) (12 January 2024)
Nedbank Limited v Mashaba (2023/0345755; 2023/047197; 2023/047199; 2023/048901; 2023/053583; 2023/059144) [2024] ZAGPJHC 33; 2024 (3) SA 155 (GJ) (12 January 2024)
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sino date 12 January 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Default judgment –
By
registrar
–
Where
credit agreement involved – Instalment agreements concluded
with bank for financing of motor vehicles –
Registrar can
grant default judgments or otherwise deal with applications for
default judgment as provided for in Uniform
Rule 31(5)(b) in those
NCA matters where High Court has jurisdiction – Attorneys
are first to approach the registrar
for default judgment –
Should the applicant for default judgment seek to approach open
court directly, without first
placing the matter before the
registrar in terms of Rule 31(5), it must have good reason to do
so, supported where necessary
by the appropriate facts.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2023-034575
REPORTABLE:
Yes
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
MASHABA
,
ERICK
Respondent
AND
Case
No: 2023-047197
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
MAMADI
,
MOYAHABO JONATHAN
Respondent
AND
Case
No: 2023-047199
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
MASHABA
,
VINCENT
Respondent
AND
Case
No: 2023-048901
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
TSHOFELA
,
THOBELA
Respondent
AND
Case
No: 2023-053583
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
THE
MARKETING AND MEDIA GUYS (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent
AND
Case
No: 2023-059144
In
the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
MDLADLA
,
ARCHIBALDE HLAKANIPHANI
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is a revised version of the judgment handed down on 12
January 2024, correcting certain typographical errors.
Gilbert
AJ:
1.
The applicant in each of the actions seeks default judgment
on
instalment agreements concluded between it and the respondent for the
financing of motor vehicles. The applicant bank is the
same in all
the matters, and the same attorneys and same counsel were briefed in
each matter by the applicant.
2.
The instalment agreements fall within the ambit of the National
Credit Act, 2005 (“the NCA”). The applicant as credit
provider either seeks cancellation of the particular instalment
agreement and the return of the motor vehicle that had been financed
under the agreement or, where the term of the instalment agreement
has already expired, payment of the outstanding balance by the
consumer.
3.
As the claims are each
for ‘a debt or a liquidated demand’,
[1]
ordinarily application would be made to the registrar for default
judgment in terms of Uniform Rule 31(5). The applicant in these
actions has not sought default judgment from the registrar. Instead
the applicant has enrolled these matters for default judgment
in the
unopposed motion court. These are not instances where the registrar
had in the exercise of its powers in terms of rule 31(5)(b)(vi)
required the applications to be set down for hearing in open court.
4.
Upon the matters being called before me on the unopposed roll,
I
enquired of applicant’s then counsel whether the registrar
should have been approached, as provided for in rule 31(5),
rather
than enrolled for hearing in open court.
5.
Although each of the
claims fall within the jurisdiction of the magistrates’ courts,
the High Court, as it has concurrent
jurisdiction, cannot decline to
entertain the matters.
[2]
But
what is not clear is whether the registrar may grant default
judgment in terms of rule 31(5) where the proceedings
fall within the
ambit of the debt enforcement procedures prescribed in the NCA. If
the registrar cannot do so, then the applications
for default
judgment were appropriately enrolled in open court. On the other
hand, if the registrar can do so, then consideration
needs to be
given to whether the registrar should first have been approached,
rather than open court burdened with applications
that can be
competently decided by the registrar.
6.
Section 130 of the NCA is headed ‘Debt Procedures in a
Court’.
Sections 130(1) and (2) provide for the circumstances in which a
credit provider can approach the court to enforce
a credit agreement.
Section 130(3) provides for what ‘the court’ must be
satisfied of before it determines the matter.
Section 130(4) provides
for what ‘the court’ either must or may do if it makes
certain determinations.
7.
As section 130(3) requires that the ‘the court’
be so
satisfied, the issue that arises is whether the registrar can fulfil
the role of ‘the court’, and so determine
the matter and
grant default judgment, or whether it is an open court that is
required to do so.
8.
There are conflicting decisions across the Divisions of the
High
Court, and, as will appear below, there is no binding precedent in
this Division.
9.
In light of the importance of the issue and the prevalence of
these
types of matters, the applications were adjourned to enable the
applicant to make written submissions.
10.
The Banking Association of South Africa (“BASA”)
subsequently obtained
leave to be admitted as
amicus curiae
given the importance of the issue to the banking industry.
11.
Both the applicant bank and BASA made extensive written submissions
as well as oral
submissions at a subsequent hearing. I am indebted to
them and their legal teams for their useful contributions.
12.
I first consider by way of an overview of the various decisions
whether there is binding
precedent in this Division.
13.
In
Du
Plessis v Firstrand Bank Limited trading as Wesbank
[3]
the consumer defendant
applied for rescission of default judgment granted by the registrar
on the basis that the registrar was not
competent to do so as it was
not ‘the court’ as required by section 130 of the NCA.
Tlhapi J for this Division found
that the registrar was competent to
grant default judgment, and so refused to rescind the default
judgment. The court did so after
considering
section 23
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
and rejecting submissions on behalf of the
defendant for rescission that Jafta J in a minority judgment in
Nkata
v FirstRand Bank
2016
(4) SA 257
(CC) and again in a minority judgment in
University
of Stellenbosch Legal Aid Clinic and Others v Minister of Justice and
Correctional Services and Others
2016
(6) SA 596
(CC) had found that it was only for a court, and not the
registrar, to determine NCA claims as required by section 130 of the
NCA.
14.
But decisions would then follow in this, and other, Divisions that
went the other
way and found that the registrar was not competent to
grant default judgment in NCA actions.
15.
In
Theu
v First Rand Auto Receivables (RF) Limited
[4]
Matebese AJ in this
Division reasoned, having raised the issue
mero
motu
and
having subsequently received written submissions from the parties,
with particular reference to the statements made by Jafta
J in
his minority judgment in
Nkata
,
that the oversight function required by
section 130
requires much
interpretative exercise and so could not be done by the registrar but
must be done by the court.
[5]
In
that matter too the consumer had approached the court to rescind a
default judgment that had been granted against her by the
registrar.
As the court found that the registrar had no power to grant the
default judgment, it declared the default judgment a
nullity and set
aside the warrant issued pursuant to that default judgment. In
addition the credit provider was ordered to pay
the costs of the
rescission application.
16.
Thereafter Mabuse J in
Seleka v
Fast Issuer SPV (RF) Limited and Another
[6]
for this Division
similarly rescinded a default judgment that had been granted by the
registrar, again with the credit provider
to pay the costs. Again the
court relied upon the remarks made by Jafta J in
Nkata.
[7]
17.
It is not only this
Division that has found that the registrar cannot grant default
judgment. Nkosi J in the KwaZulu-Natal
Division,
Pietermaritzburg in
Xulu
v Standard Bank of South Africa Limited and Others
[8]
similarly set aside a
default judgment because the registrar had granted the default
judgment. The court, with reference to Jafta
J’s minority
judgment in
Nkata
and also to the judgments
in
Theu
and
Seleka,
considered
the issue to be settled that the registrar was not competent to grant
default judgments in NCA actions as
section 130
required that ‘the
court’ determine the matter.
18.
None of
Theu
,
Seleka
or
Xulu
referred to the
earlier decision of
Du Plessis
and its reasoning.
19.
The full court decision
of the Mpumalanga Division in
Mollentze
[9]
followed. The decision is
important for several reasons. Firstly, as a decision of the full
court, while not binding in this Division,
from the perspective of
precedent it is to be considered highly persuasive. Secondly, whereas
in the preceding matters the issue
had been decided in the context of
rescission proceedings, the full court had been specifically
constituted to squarely consider
inter
alia
whether
the registrar was competent to grant default judgments in NCA matters
in terms of
rule 31(5)
, and which it did after hearing argument from
both the applicants in that matter and BASA. Thirdly, the full
court specifically
considered the earlier decisions of
Theu
,
Seleka
and
Xulu
and
their reliance on Jafta J’s minority judgment in
Nkata
,
as well as the decision to the contrary in
Du
Plessis.
20.
The full court, having considered these various decisions, preferred
the reasoning
in
Du Plessis
, and found that the registrar was
both able (who should be suitably skilled) and competent in terms of
section 130
to grant default judgments pursuant to
rule 31(5).
The
full court found in paragraphs 14 and 15 that the statements that had
been made by Jafta J in his minority judgment in
Nkata
were
effectively distinguishable, and
obiter
.
21.
Notwithstanding the
persuasively pragmatic view adopted by the full court in
Mollentze
,
Snellenburg AJ in
Gcasamba
[10]
declined to follow
Mollentze
.
The court in
Gcasamba
reasoned in paragraphs 45
and 46 that the issue had been resolved by Jafta J’s judgment
in
University
of Stellenbosch
,
which the preceding judgments, including the full court judgment in
Mollentze
,
had not considered, and which was consistent with Jafta J’s
earlier minority judgment in
Nkata
that it is only a court,
and not the registrar, that may carry out the
section 130(3)
determination.
22.
Snellenburg AJ further found in paragraph 48 that even if Jafta
J’s findings
in
University of Stellenbosch
were not
decisive, that he in any event agreed with Jafta J that
section
130(3)
is in mandatory terms and it is the court, and not the
registrar, that must satisfy itself that there has been compliance as
required
by
section 130(3).
23.
Subsequently Dreyer AJ
for the Eastern Cape Division in
Ngandela
v ABSA Bank Limited and Another
[11]
agreed with
Gcasamba
and declined to follow
Mollentze
.
The court in
Ngandela
described the full court
decision in
Mollentze
as an outlier and
incorrect in its decision that what was stated in
Nkata
was
obiter
.
The court found that what was stated by Jafta J in
Nkata
was binding. The court
too aligned itself with the decisions of
Theu
,
Seleka
and
Xulu
.
24.
Insofar as our Gauteng
Division is concerned, following
Mollentze
the
court in
Nonyane
v Nedbank
[12]
was of the view that it was so clear, based upon what Jafta J had
said in
Nkata
,
that the registrar could not grant default judgment, that when the
court rescinded the default judgment that had been granted
by the
registrar in that matter, it ordered the credit provider to pay costs
on a punitive scale because in the court’s view
the credit
provider’s opposition to the rescission was frivolous or
unreasonable. No reference was made in the short judgment
to the full
court decision in
Mollentze,
which
supported the credit provider’s position.
25.
I am required to follow those decisions of this Division of a single
judge unless
I am of the view that they are clearly wrong. In the
present instance, those decisions are not consistent. The reasoned
decision
of
Du Plessis
goes one way. The subsequent decisions
of
Theu, Seleka and Nonyane
go the other way. Although the
latter decisions are more recent, the earlier decision of
Du
Plessis
is affirmed by what must be treated as the highly
persuasive full court decision in
Mollentze
. In the
circumstances, in my view, I am not required to, nor am I able to,
decide that one or other of the line of decisions in
this Division is
clearly wrong.
26.
It remains necessary to consider whether what was stated by Jafta J
in his minority
judgments in
Nkata
and
University of
Stellenbosch
is decisive of the issue. As appears above,
Gcasamba
and
Ngandela
for the Free State and Eastern Cape Divisions
respectively found this to be so. On the other hand, the full court
in
Mollentze
found not, as had previously this Division in
Du
Plessis
.
27.
Nkata
was concerned with the correct interpretation of
sections 129(3)
and
129
(4)(b) of the NCA. An issue was whether it was
necessary for the consumer to have paid certain legal costs before a
credit agreement
was re-instated.
Section 129(3)
provides that
a
consumer may remedy a default under the credit agreement by payment
to the credit provider, at any time prior to its cancellation,
of
'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’
.
The legal costs at issue as claimed by the credit provider
included the costs of the credit provider obtaining default judgment
from the registrar in terms of
rule 31(5).
28.
The majority judgment written by Moseneke DCJ upheld the appeal,
finding in
paragraph 123 that the legal costs would become due
and payable only when they are reasonable, agreed or taxed, and on
due notice
to the consumer. As this had not taken place, the majority
judgment found that it was not necessary for the consumer to have
paid
them before by the operation of law the credit agreement was
re-instated in terms of
section 129(3).
Nothing was said in the
majority judgment on whether the registrar was competent to grant
judgment in terms of
section 130
, and so whether the costs of
obtaining such default judgment were costs lawfully incurred by the
credit provider in obtaining that
default judgment.
29.
Jafta J in his separate judgment concurring that the appeal should be
upheld agreed
that the legal costs were not due but for reasons
different to that advanced in the main judgment of Moseneke DCJ.
Jafta J found
that for a variety of reasons, which are specified in
paragraph 173 of his judgment, costs that had been incurred by the
credit
provider were not recoverable as they had not been lawfully
incurred, and so the consumer did not have to pay them to have the
credit agreement re-instated in terms of
section 129(3).
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30.
One of those reasons specified by Jafta J in paragraph 173 of this
judgment, is that
the credit provider ‘
sought and obtained a
default judgment from the registrar of the High Court, something that
is incompatible with
s 130(3)
which requires such matters to be
determined by the court’.
This statement features centrally
in decisions such as
Gcasamba
that the findings by Jafta J are
decisive and binding in relation to the present issue.
31.
For the sake of completeness, in a dissenting judgment dismissing the
appeal, Cameron
J (in which Nugent AJ concurred and who wrote his own
separate judgment), found that it was necessary for the consumer to
first
pay, or at least tender, payment of the costs before the credit
agreement would be re-instated. They disagreed with the majority
judgment that the legal costs would become due and payable only when
they are reasonable, agreed or taxed, and on due notice to
the
consumer, and so need not be paid for the credit agreement to be
re-instated. Cameron J in his judgment said nothing about
the
competence of the registrar to grant default judgment. As appears
below, Nugent J in his separate judgment expressed reservations
about
Jafta J’s findings.
32.
The full court in
Mollentze
was of
the view that what was stated by Jafta J in his minority judgment was
not binding. It agreed with submissions made by the
applicant
that the court in
Nkata
was not called upon to
answer whether
section 130(3)
prohibited the registrar from granting
default judgment in NCA matters.
[13]
It appears that full court was therefore of the view that it was
unnecessary for the court to have made any findings in relation
to
the registrar’s powers in terms of
section 130(3)
,
[14]
and so what was said by Jafta J in
Nkata
was effectively
obiter
.
Similarly counsel in this matter submit that the issue of whether the
registrar could grant default judgment was not an issue
before the
court.
33.
I have doubt about these
particular reasons why what Jafta J said is
obiter
.
His finding that the registrar could not have granted judgment was a
central part of his reasoning in finding that the costs that
had been
incurred by the credit provider were not recoverable and so need not
be paid in terms of
section 129(3)
before the credit agreement was
re-instated. Depending on the method of abstracting the
rationes
decidendi
from
a judgment (or in the case of courts of more than one judge, the
judgments, if more than one judgment has been delivered),
which is
not a straight-forward issue and about which there are differing
views,
[15]
Jafta J’s
findings may constitute
rationes
decidendi
[16]
if
it
was the only judgment of the court in the matter. That this was one
of several reasons underpinning his finding that the costs
incurred
were unlawful, each of which may be dispositive and which were not
subsidiary, does not preclude that reason from being
a
ratio
decidendi
abstracted
from the case.
[17]
34.
But Jafta J judgment is
not the only judgment in
Nkata
.
I agree with the submissions by counsel, and as found by Tlhapi
J in
Du
Plessis
[18]
and then subsequently in
Mollentze,
[19]
that the fact that the
majority judgment in paragraph 75 of its judgment ‘noted’
the additional reasons given by Jafta
J in his minority judgment does
not make those additional reasons part of the binding
rationes
decidendi
to
be taken from the decision.
35.
As pointed out in
Du
Plessis
[20]
and by counsel, Nugent AJ in paragraph 158 of his separate judgment
in
Nkata
cautions that Jafta J’s
statement that the default judgment is null and void including for
the reason that the registrar could
not grant judgment is going down
‘untrodden paths’.
36.
Whatever may be concluded
in relation to whether Jafta J’s statements would constitute
rationes
decidendi
if
his judgment was the only judgment, in the present instance what
Jafta J said is not part of the majority judgment. Although
Jafta J
agreed with the majority judgment that legal costs were not payable,
he did so for different reasons. His reasons, including
that the
registrar was unable to competently grant default judgment because of
section 130
, were not adopted by the majority. Jafta J’s
concurrence that legal costs were not payable were not necessary for
the majority
judgment of Moseneke DCJ to constitute the order of the
appeal court upholding the appeal i.e. even if Jafta J had not
concurred
in the judgment of Moseneke JA, that judgment would still
constitute the judgment of the majority of the court, resulting in
the
order upholding the appeal. Accordingly Jafta J’s reasons
are not included in the
rationes
decidendi
of
the decision.
[21]
37.
It follows that I
disagree with
Ngandela
[22]
and
Nonyane
[23]
that what was found by
Jafta J in
Nkata
is binding and decisive.
I agree with the full court decision in
Mollentze
that
Jafta J’s statements are not binding, albeit not entirely for
the same reasons.
38.
I also disagree with
Gcasamba
[24]
and
Ngandela
[25]
that was said by Jafta J
in
University
of Stellenbosch
in
relation to
section 130
is decisive and binding. I am of the view
that was said by Jafta J as to the registrar’s inability to
grant default judgment
in NCA matters do not constitute
rationes
decidendi
.
As appears above, this is consistent with the decision of
Du
Plessis
in
this Division.
39.
In
University of Stellenbosch
the court was concerned with the
constitutionality of sections in the
Magistrates’ Courts Act
1944
dealing with the issue of emolument attachment orders, and
particularly whether judicial supervision of execution by the court
was required. In two concurring judgments the majority found that
judicial supervision was required and that as the relevant sections,
properly interpreted, did not provide such judicial supervision by
the court as it was the clerk of the court that issued the attachment
orders and not the court, the relevant provisions were
unconstitutional. Jafta J in a third judgment differed from the
concurring
majority judgments in that he accepted that judicial
supervision was required, but the sections could, and should, be
interpreted
that it was the court, and not the clerk of the court,
that issued the orders and so the sections did provide for judicial
supervision.
40.
During the course of his judgment, Jafta J made various introductory
statements in
relation to the manner in which the NCA as a form of
consumer protection legislation must be interpreted in order to
advance its
purposes. It was during the course of doing so that Jafta
J said in relation to
section 130
, including in paragraph 25 that
‘
(n)
otably
it must be the court and the court alone that is satisfied that there
was compliance. Furthermore, it must only be the court
that
determines the case and grants judgment. The court's satisfaction
that there was compliance constitutes a jurisdictional fact
which
must exist before the court may continue with the hearing’
.
41.
Apart from Jafta J’s
statements not forming part of the majority judgment and for that
reason not constituting
rationes
decidendi
,
they were not necessary for the decision that he reached and, with
respect, constitute material extraneous to the essential reasoning
for his finding.
[26]
Section
130
of the NCA is concerned with the judicial process resulting in
judgment, as distinct from execution. Jafta J himself recognised
this
distinction, as appears from paragraphs 33 and 34 of his judgment.
The former is the subject of these proceedings, particularly
whether
the registrar is able to carry out the judicial process required by
section 130.
In contrast,
University
of Stellenbosch
was
concerned with the latter, which is execution, and particularly in
the form of emoluments attachment orders issued in terms
of the
Magistrates’ Courts Act,
42.
To
use the phraseology of Cameron JA in
True Motives 84 (Pty) Ltd
v Mahdi and another
2009 (4) SA 153
(SCA) in paragraph 102
“
[a]nything in a judgment that
is subsidiary is considered to be 'said along the wayside', or
'stated as part of the journey' (obiter
dictum), and is not binding
on subsequent courts
”
.
43.
As there is no binding
precedent in this Division on the issue (as the decisions of single
judges of this Division are conflicting,
as the full court decision
in
Mollentze
although highly
persuasive is not binding and as the statements by Jafta J in his
minority judgments in
Nkata
and
University
of Stellenbosch
are
obiter
),
I am required to determine the issue. I do so cognisant that
obiter
statements
from higher courts, particularly emanating from the Constitutional
Court, are highly persuasive.
[27]
That though begs the question what would constitute the
obiter
of that court when the
statements do not emanate from the majority judgment.
44.
The position adopted by the applicant and BASA, consistent with
Mollentze
, is that the registrar does have the power to grant
default judgments in NCA matters and that the full court decision of
Mollentze
should be followed.
45.
Mollentze
is persuasive,
particularly in its pragmatism. My reservation with the decision, as
raised with counsel, was that if
section 130
of the NCA did require
judicial oversight, numerous decisions have held in relation to other
instances that it was for the court
to exercise judicial oversight,
and that someone else, such as the registrar, could not do so.
[28]
That a judgment by default granted by the registrar in terms of the
Uniform Rules is deemed to be a judgment of the court
in terms of
section 23
of the
Superior Courts Act does
not equate to the
registrar’s determination being the same as the judicial
oversight required by those decisions.
46.
I also expressed some reservation whether the obligations and powers
of the court
as referred to in
section 130(4)
could meaningfully and
appropriately be undertaken and exercised by the registrar, rather
than in open court.
Section 130(4)(a)
provides that if the court
determines that the credit agreement is reckless as described in
section 80
of the NCA, the court must make an order declaring the
credit agreement reckless and may together with that order set aside
all
or part of the consumer’s rights and obligations under the
agreement as the court determines just and reasonable in the
circumstances,
or suspend the terms and effect of that credit
agreement. This does not appear to be a duty or power that is readily
capable of
being discharged or exercised by the registrar. So too in
relation to several of the other powers of the court as referred to
in
terms of
section 130(4)
, such as where the credit agreement is
subject to a pending debt review or debt re-arrangement order or
agreement or where the
matter is pending before the National Consumer
Tribunal.
47.
In response to these reservations, BASA in particular developed its
argument as follows:
47.1.
section 130
of the NCA does require an oversight role but that role
is not that of ‘judicial oversight’ in the form of a
judge
in open court;
47.2.
there is no constitutional imperative that requires the oversight
function to be fulfilled
under
section 130
to be confined to that of
a judge in open court. This in contrast to the judicial oversight
function as is required when the order
is in relation to the
execution against the debtor’s property, for example in orders
declaring residential property executable
or emoluments attachment
orders. This, so the submissions go, is why the reliance on
Nkata
and
University of Stellenbosch
is misplaced.
47.3.
the references to the ‘court’ in
section 130
are
necessarily to be interpreted as including the registrar, based
inter
alia
upon the ordinary meaning of the word and that the registrar
is as part of the court. The submissions further rely on
section
11(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act, which
provides that a registrar
must be appointed for each Division and describes what is required of
a registrar, including to do “
whatever may be required for
the administration of justice or the execution of the powers and
authorities of the said court
”;
47.4.
that the powers conferred upon the registrar in terms of
rule
31(5)(b)
are wide enough to enable the registrar as part of the court
to fulfil the functions required of ‘the court’ in terms
of
section 130
;
47.5.
as the registrar had no power to grant judgments other than in
respect of default judgments,
the fulfilment by the registrar of its
section 130
oversight function as ‘the court’ must be
considered in that context. Issues such as whether the credit
agreement is
reckless, subject to a pending debt review or a debt
re-arrangement order or agreement or whether the matter is pending
before
the National Consumer Tribunal, and the appropriate order to
be made in those circumstances in terms of
section 130(4)
would not
ordinarily arise in default judgment applications as typically that
is something that would be placed before the court
by the defendant
consumer. As the defendant consumer is in default of appearance to
defend or of delivery of a plea, these issues
would not ordinarily
arise in applications for default judgment in terms of
rule 31(5)(a).
In any event, the credit provider is required to place before the
court certain information that would disavow the existence of
at
least some of these instances, such as appears from
section
129(3)(b).
Should these issues arise, then the registrar has
sufficient powers in terms of
rule 31(5)
(b), including to require the
matter to be set down in open court.
48.
I have doubts that the registrar is structurally part of the court in
the sense submitted
by BASA upon its interpretation of the
Superior
Courts Act. But
I do favour the submissions, which align with those
of the applicant, that the oversight required by
section 130
is not
the kind of ‘judicial supervision’ as contemplated in the
judgments that deal with judicial supervision of execution
orders,
and which oversight can be adequately performed by the register using
its prescribed powers in terms of
rule 31(5)(b)(i)
to (vi). This
appears to accord with what Tlhapi J was expressing in paragraph 15
of her judgment of this Division in
Du Plessis
, which is that
the function undertaken by the registrar is administrative and which
the registrar is able to effectively discharge
by having the
necessary knowledge to make decisions and by exercising its
prescribed powers in terms of
rule 31(5)(b)(i)
to (vi). This was also
found in
Mollentze
in paragraphs 30 and 31 that the nature of
the work of the registrar in considering the granting of default
judgment is about procedural
compliance.
49.
The majority judgment in
University of Stellenbosch
affirmed
in paragraph 129 that the Constitution requires judicial supervision
where an applicant seeks an order to execute against
or seize control
of the property of another person. In that matter, the emoluments
attachment orders that were the subject of the
decision were
execution orders against the debtor’s wages. In foreclosure
proceedings, the execution orders are against the
debtor’s
home.
Nkata
was a matter relating to the execution on the
debtor’s home. In contrast, in the present instance in
those matters
where the applicant seeks the return of the vehicle,
the order relates not to the debtor’s property but to the
applicant’s
property as the applicant as the credit provider
has reserved ownership of the vehicle until it is paid.
50.
The parties have not placed before me any facts why a particular
interpretation would
be contrary to the purpose of the NCA, or
prejudicial to the banking industry. The facts would have to have
been in affidavits
filed by the parties. The applicant bank in each
of the matters did not file any affidavits. In any event, the
averments in their
particulars of claim went no further than the
usual averments relating to their cause of action. BASA in their only
affidavit,
being that in support of being admitted as an
amicus
,
did not advance any facts. The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Mpongo
emphasised in paragraphs 11 to 14 that material facts needed to
be adduced to support arguments presented about litigation dynamics
and their supposed implications for constitutional values, such as
section 34 of the Constitution.
51.
Based on what is before
me, I agree with the reasoning in
Du
Plessis
[29]
and
Mollentze
[30]
that the purposes of the
NCA will not be undermined by the registrar fulfilling the role of
the court as required in section 130,
and that the powers conferred
upon the registrar in terms of rule 31(5)(b) are sufficient to enable
it to effectively fulfil that
role.
52.
The decisions to the contrary, such as
Theu
and
Seleka
in
this Division, and
Gcasamba
and
Ngandela
decided after
Mollentze
, rely heavily on what was said by Jafta J in
Nkata
and
University of Stellenbosch.
For the reasons given above, I
do not find these statements binding. I am not alone in this, as
appears from
Du Plessis
in this Division and the full court
decision in
Mollentze
. Nugent AJ in paragraph 75 of his
separate judgment in
Nkata
had his reservations about Jafta J
going down ‘untrodden paths’. Cameron J in paragraph 128
of his concurring majority
judgment in
University of Stellenbosch
expressed his disagreement with the overall approach of Jafta J
in that matter. Further, as submitted by the applicant and BASA,
Nkata
and
University of Stellenbosch
are
distinguishable as those matters dealt with constitutive imperatives
in the context of execution orders on the property of
a person other
than the credit provider, such as the debtor.
53.
Applicant’s
counsel, relying on
Du
Plessis,
[31]
makes the point that the NCA does not divest of the registrar of the
powers conferred upon it by the
Superior Courts Act. There
is merit
in this.
Section 23
of the
Superior Courts Act
[32
]
expressly provides for the registrar to grant default judgment in
certain instances, being those that fall within the ambit of
rule
31(5)(a).
0cm; line-height: 150%">
54.
Section 172(1)
of the NCA specifies when the NCA will prevail over
other legislation in the event of a conflict. The
Superior Courts Act
is
not one of the listed instances in
section 172(1)
where the NCA
will prevail.
55.
In any event, there is no conflict.
Section 2(7)(a)
of the NCA
expressly provides that “
(e)xcept as specifically set out
in, or necessarily implied by, this Act, the provisions of this Act
are not to be construed as
… limiting, amending, repealing or
otherwise altering the provision of any other Act”.
This
would in any event accord with the usual principles relating to the
interpretations of statutes. When interpreting
section 130
of the
NCA, the section is to be read in a manner that is consistent with
and does not give rise to a conflict with
section 23
of the
Superior
Courts Act. This
can be done by interpreting the reference to ‘the
court’ in
section 130(3)
of the NCA as including the registrar.
56.
The opening words of
section 130(3)
require that ‘the court’ determine the
matter ‘
(d)espite
any provision of law or contract to the contrary’
.
This admittedly gives scope for an argument that
section 130(3)
prevails over
section 23
of the
Superior Courts Act, and
so the
determination required by the section must be in open court. But once
it is accepted that the kind of oversight required
is not the kind of
‘judicial supervision’ such as is required over the
granting of execution orders and that the purposes
of the NCA can be
advanced without requiring every application for default judgment in
an NCA matter to be heard in open court,
[33]
there is no need to read
section 130(3)
of the NCA as being in
conflict with
section 23
of the
Superior Courts Act, rather
than
consonant with it.
57.
I therefore find that the registrar can in terms of
rule 31(5)
grant
default judgments, or otherwise deal with applications for default
judgment as provided for in
rule 31(5)(b)
, in those NCA matters where
the High Court has jurisdiction. In doing so, I have particularly had
regard to what I must accept
as the highly persuasive nature of the
full court decision of
Mollentze,
where the court was squarely
called upon to deal with the issue, and which prevails over the
obiter
statements that were made by Jafta J during the course
of his minority judgments in
Nkata
and
University of
Stellenbosch
.
58.
The applicant submitted that if I should find that the registrar does
have the power
to grant default judgments in NCA matters in terms of
rule 31(5)
, the court should nevertheless grant default judgment.
BASA submitted that the applicant for default judgment should have an
election
whether to approach the registrar or set down the
application in open court.
59.
Madlanga J for the Constitutional Court in
SAHRC
in paragraph
42 recognised the “
huge problem
” arising from the
clogging up of High Court rolls with matters falling within the
jurisdiction of the magistrates’
courts. While the default
judgments in NCA actions to be considered by the registrar in terms
of
rule 31(5)
are not confined to matters falling within the
jurisdiction of the magistrates’ courts, the point made about
the clogging
up of High Court rolls with matters that may
appropriately be determined elsewhere, such as in this instance the
registrar, remains
good. The full court in
Mollentze
also
described why it was pragmatically appropriate for the registrar in
performing its quasi-judicial functions to determine the
applications
rather than in open court, including from a costs perspective and in
relieving an open court from having to do so.
60.
Madlanga J further pointed out in paragraph 36 of
SAHRC
that in the absence of a constitutional challenge
, ‘the
division of labour mandated by the Legislature between courts in
respect of their jurisdiction must be honoured.
” Should a
court have jurisdiction such as in terms of section 21 of the
Superior Court Act to decide a matter, then it cannot
decline to do
so on the basis that it is over-burdened and the parties should go
elsewhere.
61.
Analogously in the present instance. The division of labour mandated
between open
court and the registrar must be respected, including by
the attorneys representing the credit providers in NCA matters and by
the
registrar.
62.
The attorneys are first to approach the registrar for default
judgment – not
because the court does not have jurisdiction or
competence to hear application for default judgment but because of
the described
division of labour between open court and the
registrar. Should the applicant for default judgment seek to approach
open court
directly, without first placing the matter before the
registrar in terms of rule 31(5), it must have good reason to do so,
supported
where necessary by the appropriate facts, as cautioned in
Mpongo
. What may constitute good reason is not something to be
decided now.
63.
The registrar too must
fulfil its part of the mandate. The registrar cannot, routinely,
require the matter to be heard in open court
simply because it is an
NCA matter. Nor can it do so because it may be over-burdened.
[34]
The registrar is permitted to consider NCA actions where they fall
within the ambit of rule 31(5), and to perform the oversight
function
required by section 130 of the NCA, including to appropriately
exercise the powers that it has in terms of rule 31(5)(b)(i)
to (vi),
and it should do so. Should the registrar require a matter to be
heard in open court in terms of rule 31(5)(b)(iv), it
should give
sufficient reasons. Although the applicants’ counsel in his
heads of argument and during his oral submissions
sought specific
relief in relation to the performance by the registrar of its
functions, this is not an appropriate occasion to
do so.
64.
Accordingly, the matters are to be removed from the roll and so
enable the applicant
to approach the registrar in terms of rule
31(5)(a).
65.
Accordingly, in each of the matters, the applications are removed
from the roll, with
no order as to costs.
B M GILBERT
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Dates
of hearings:
06
September 2023 & 29 November 2023
Date
of judgment:
12
January 2024
Counsel
for the applicant in each matter:
M
Reineke
Instructed
by:
Hainsworth
Koopman Inc, Pietermaritzburg
c/o
Nkotzoe Attorneys, Midrand
Counsel
for the respondents:
No
appearance for any of the respondents
Counsel
for Banking Association of South Africa:
I
Green SC
P
Ngcongo
I
Hayath
Instructed
by:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
[1]
Nedbank
Limited v Mollentze
2022
(4) SA 597
(ML) (“Mollentze”) at para 47;
Gcasamba
v Mercedes-Benz Financial Services SA (Pty) Limited and Another
2023
(1) SA 141
(FB) (“
Gcasamba
”
)
at para 37.
[2]
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited and Others v Mpongo and Others
2021 (6) SA 403
(SCA)
(“
Mpongo
”
)
and subsequently affirmed on appeal to the Constitutional Court in
South
African Human Rights Commission v Standard Bank of South Africa
Limited and Others
2023
(3) SA 36
(CC) (“
SAHRC”)
.
[3]
[2018] ZAGPPHC 286 (2 May 2018).
[4]
[2020] ZAGPPHC 319 (12 June 2020).
[5]
Paras 45 to 49, with reference to paragraph 173 of
Nkata
.
[6]
[2021] ZAGPPHC 128 (10 March 2021).
[7]
Nkata
supra
at
para 173.
[8]
[2021] ZAKZPHC 51 (23 August 2021).
[9]
Above.
[10]
Above.
[11]
[2023] ZAECELLC 6 (31 March 2023).
[12]
[2023] ZAGPPHC 367 (6 March 2023).
[13]
Para
14 and 33.
[14]
Para
15.
[15]
Hahlo & Kahn
The
South African Legal System and its Background
(Juta) 1968 at p 260.
See also the discussion in
Pretoria
City Council v Levinson
1949
(3) SA 305
(AD) at pp 316 and 317.
[16]
Applying
what appears to be preferred approach by Schreiner JA, as he then
was, in
Pretoria
City Council
above,
at 317.
[17]
Turnbull-Jackson
v Hibiscus Coast Municipality
2014
(6) SA 592
(CC) at 619C/D.
[18]
Above,
para 12.
[19]
Para
33.
[20]
Para
14.
[21]
Per
Greenberg JA in
Fellner
v Minister of the Interior
1954
(4) SA 523
(A) above, at 538E to 539C, which applied in this
instance appears to be consistent with what was held by the majority
judgment
of Centlivres CJ (Fagan JA concurring) at 532D to 533A in
that matter. See also the discussion in Hahlo & Kahn above, at
274, 275.
[22]
Para
6 to 11.
[23]
Para
5 to 7.
[24]
Para
46.
[25]
Para
18.
[26]
R
v Crause
1959
(1) SA 272
(A) at 281B/C.
[27]
Turnbull-Jackson
above,
at 616B.
[28]
As
in the many cases precluding the registrar from grant default
judgments and execution orders in foreclosures on residential
immovable property. Or, as held in
University
of Stellenbosch
,
in the context of the issue of emoluments attachment orders, which
could not be done by the clerk of the magistrates’
court.
[29]
Para
15.
[30]
Para
27.
[31]
Para
8.
[32]
And
its predecessor, section 27A of the Supreme Court Act, 1959, which
was in force when the NCA came into effect on 1 June 2007.
[33]
Mollentze
at
para 19, 27 to 29, 59 and 60.
[34]
The
full court of this Division in
Nedbank
Ltd v Mateman
[2007] ZAGPHC 295
;
2008
(4) SA 276
(T) at 286B-D rejected an argument initiated by the
registrar that the workload of the court, and by implication by the
registrar,
constitutes a valid reason for refusing to hear a matter
that falls within its jurisdiction. This was subsequently affirmed
by
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Mpongo
and
then on further appeal by the Constitutional Court in
SAHRC
.
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