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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 132
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## Firstrand Bank Limited v Komane and Another (2022-018954)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 132 (29 January 2024)
Firstrand Bank Limited v Komane and Another (2022-018954)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 132 (29 January 2024)
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sino date 29 January 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022-018954
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE
29 January 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED Applicant
and
MICHAEL
GEORGE KOMANE First Respondent
PERTUNIA
NELISILE KOMANE Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
J:
[1]
The applicant, Firstrand Bank Limited, the plaintiff in the action
proceedings,
instituted summary judgment proceedings against the
first and second respondents Pertunia Nelisile Komane and Michael
George Komane,
jointly and severally. The second respondent, Michael
George Komane, only opposed the summary judgment application.
[2]
The applicant claimed summary judgment for payment of the sum of
R276 906.21
together with interest at the rate of 9.57% per
annum with effect from 1 August 2022 to date of payment, both
dates inclusive,
an order declaring the immovable property, Erf
3[...] M[...] Ext 1[...] Township (“the immovable property”),
the authorisation
of a writ of execution and that a reserve price be
set for the sale of the immovable property. The proceedings are based
on a loan
agreement concluded between the applicant and the
respondents, the debt being secured by a mortgage bond registered in
favour of
the applicant over the immovable property. The respondents
are the registered co-owners of the immovable property and debtors
under
the mortgage bond.
[3]
The second respondent raised various defences to the summary judgment
application.
I deal with each defence in turn.
[4]
The second respondent argued that the first respondent had a material
interest
in the proceedings and that the latter had no knowledge of
the proceedings. The second respondent’s counsel at the
hearing pertinently failed to consider the order for substituted
service on the first respondent and the delivery by registered
post
of the notice in terms of s 129 of the National Credit Act, 34 of
2005 (“the Act”) upon the respondents as well
as service
of the application for summary judgment and the notice of set down of
the hearing before me upon the first respondent
in terms of the order
for substituted service.
[5]
The applicant demonstrated however that the notice in terms of s 129
and
s 130 of the Act was delivered to the respondents’
chosen address, being the first respondent’s email address
chosen in terms of the respondents’ home loan agreement. In
addition, the applicant showed that an order for substituted service
on the first respondent was granted by this Court on 28 November
2022 and that the applicant complied with the order in respect
of the
application for summary judgment and the notice of set down in
respect of the hearing before me, upon the first respondent.
As
regards the notice in terms of s 129 of the Act, service took
place by registered on both the first and second respondents
at Stand
3[...] M[...] Ext 1[...] Zone 91852, being the immovable property and
the respondents’ chosen
domicilium
address. The
applicant showed that the notices arrived at the Meadowlands Post
Office being the correct post office, which post
office duly
dispatched to the respondents notice of receipt of the registered
item and to which the respondents did not react.
[6]
The
Constitutional Court in
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[1]
made it clear that a creditor is not obliged to ensure subjective
knowledge or personal receipt by a debtor of a notice in terms
of s
129 of the Act. Furthermore, the procedure utilised by the applicant
to deliver the s 129 notice to the respondents complies
with the
requirements set out by the Constitutional Court in
Kubyana
and is sufficient given the absence of any special circumstances
alleged by the respondents as to why the second respondent did
not
retrieve the notice from the post office. No such special
circumstances were alleged by the second respondent.
[7]
Furthermore,
the applicant referred to
Amcoal
Collieries Ltd v Truter
[2]
in which the SCA held that parties may nominate an address for
service of notices in contracts and compliance therewith, being
service at the chosen address, is good service, equivalent to service
on a domicilium address, whether or not the addressee is
present at
the relevant time.
[8]
Accordingly, the applicant discharged its obligations in terms of s
129 of the
Act and the applicant is entitled to enforce the credit
agreement.
[9]
Furthermore, this being an application that invokes Rule 46A, the
applicant
served the papers in the application for default judgment
upon the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality. It must be
stated,
however, that the application for default judgment was
abandoned by the applicant which subsequent invoked the procedure for
summary
judgment.
[10]
Moreover, the application for summary judgment and the notice of set
down for this hearing were
both served on the respondents in terms of
paragraph 1.3 of the order for substituted service on 3 November
2023.
[11]
The second respondent argued that the applicant’s claims for
the immovable property to
be declared specially executable and for a
reserve price to be set in terms of Rule 46A were not competent
in terms of Rule 32,
in summary judgment proceedings, as they
did not meet the requirements of the rule.
[12]
The second
respondent’s argument in this regard, however, is without
merit in that the applicant’s claim is for
payment of a
liquidated amount of R276 906.21 and the claim for special
executability arises from the mortgage bond that is
itself a liquid
document. Thus, the claim for special executability qualifies in
terms of summary judgment proceedings under Rule 32(1)(a).
The
setting of a reserve price in terms of Rule 46A together with
the granting of an order for special executability in terms
of
Rule 32, were considered by this court in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Sawyer,
[3]
in which the court considered that the order for special
executability is ancillary to the claim for the money judgment and is
an integral part of the cause of action relied upon. Accordingly, the
applicant’s claim for a declaration of special executability
and the setting of a reserve price, which is ancillary thereto in
terms of Rule 46A, meet the requirements of Rule 32
and are
competent in terms thereof.
[13]
Furthermore,
claims for money judgments and orders for special executability are
determined in this court simultaneously and not
separately.
[4]
[14]
As to the
second respondent’s argument that the deponent to the
applicant’s affidavit in support of summary judgment
did not
himself have personal knowledge of the various allegations made in
the affidavit, our courts have long since adopted a
practical
approach by permitting deponents on behalf of corporate litigants and
financial institutions such as the present applicant,
to rely on
documents and records relevant to the particular matter for their
personal knowledge of at least certain of the relevant
facts, and the
deponent’s ability to swear positively to such facts.
[5]
[15]
The point
raised by the second respondent that the deponent to the applicant’s
affidavit relies on a certificate of balance
for knowledge of the
amount claimed and that the certificate of balance was signed by
another employee of the applicant, is irrelevant.
This is because
first-hand knowledge of every fact should not be required of a
deponent on behalf of a financial institution. See
in this regard.
[6]
[16]
Furthermore, contrary to the second respondent’s allegations,
the applicant’s deponent
does allege that he perused the
various documents. Accordingly, the absence of first-hand knowledge
on the part of the deponent
to the applicant’s verifying
affidavit in respect of certain allegations, is not determinative of
the applicant’s claim.
[17]
In respect
of the second respondent’s complaint that the applicant debited
its account with legal costs, the applicant complied
with the
requirements set out in
Nkatha
v Firstrand Bank Ltd.
[7]
[18]
The home loan agreement between the parties permits collection costs
on the scale as between
attorney and client in the event of
enforcement of the home loan agreement by the applicant, such
enforcement having indeed occurred.
Furthermore, the applicant, in
compliance with
Nkatha
, drew the cost to the second
respondent’s attention in terms of a separate demand for
payment of the legal costs, dated 22 September
2022 and
6 October 2022, giving the respondents seven days to make
payment of the legal costs, failing which the respondents
would be
deemed to have accepted the costs being debited to the respondents’
home loan account, as duly transpired. The respondents
failed to make
payment and the legal costs were debited accordingly to the
respondents’ home loan account. In any event,
having looked at
the documentary evidence of the respondents’ home loan account,
the legal costs amount to approximately
R7 000.00 to R8 000.00
and do not constitute a triable defence to the applicant’s
claim for summary judgment.
[19]
The second respondent argued that the first respondent possessed
various movables capable of
being sold and the proceeds utilised to
liquidate the arrears on the respondents’ mortgage bond and the
outstanding balance
on the loan. The movables comprised of a Toyota
Corolla vehicle with registration number W[...] and a Mercedes Benz
with registration
B[...].
[20]
The second respondent alleged that the vehicles were not subject to
finance agreements but the
value of the vehicles was not furnished by
the second respondent. and nor was the year of the vehicles’
make or the
respective mileage of the vehicles. Furthermore, the
second respondent alleged that the first respondent was in possession
of the
vehicles whilst the second respondent had no knowledge of the
first respondent’s whereabouts and thus, no knowledge of the
whereabouts of the vehicles.
[21]
In any
event, the applicant is possessed of a contractual right to execute
upon its security comprised of the immovable property,
hypothecated
in favour of the applicant in respect of monies loaned to the
respondents at their special instance and request.
[8]
[22]
The second respondent objected to the applicant’s reference to
and reliance upon the certificate
of balance. The second respondent
argued that it was not apparent that payments made by the second
respondent from August 2022
had been taken into account as the
respondents’ arrears on the home loan account had increased
since the mortgage bond was
called up by the applicant.
[23]
The use of
a certificate of balance as an evidentiary tool to facilitate proof
of an indebtedness has long been accepted by our
courts.
[9]
[24]
Furthermore, the parties’ loan agreement provides that a
certificate of balance signed
by any authorised employee of the bank
shall constitute evidence of the outstanding amount as at the date
specified therein, the
rate of interest and any other amount due and
payable by the consumer under the loan agreement. Accordingly, the
applicant is contractually
entitled to refer to a certificate of
balance, duly signed, as a method of proof of the indebtedness of the
respondents.
[25]
The second
respondent queried the arrears claimed by the applicant as well as
the full outstanding balance given payments made by
the second
respondent since August 2020. However, a perusal of the payment
history of the respondents’ home loan account
demonstrates
sporadic and inconsistent payments in amounts less than the required
monthly instalments. As a result of the respondents’
payment
history and the prevailing environment of increasing interest rates
over recent years, the respondents’ arrears have
not reduced
and the amount in arrears as at 17 May 2023 stood at R47 497.45
as per the applicant’s certificate
of balance. Furthermore, the
applicant alleged that the arears amounted to approximately 12.556
months of arrears, the last payments
being R2 000.00 on
4 February 2023.
[10]
It
is noteworthy that the arrears stood at R34 064.91 when the
applicant called up the mortgage bond.
[26]
It is
apparent from that set out above that the second respondent does not
set out a
bona
fide
defence
or a triable issue in opposition to the applicant’s claim as
required by the long standing authority of
Maharaj.
[11]
The defences upon which the second respondent places reliance are
dilatory at best and the applicant meets the test and the
requirements
for summary judgment.
[27]
The second respondent argued that the immovable property was his
primary residence as well as
the primary residence of his daughter
and three minor grandchildren. The second respondent argued that
execution over the immovable
property would deprive the family of
their Constitutional right to adequate housing and deprive them of a
home. The second respondent’s
daughter is an Uber driver
earning allegedly minimal income although the amounts thereof were
not specified. The second respondent
engages in informal trading from
the proceeds of which he makes the payments reflected on the home
loan account since August 2022.
The second respondent did not provide
an approximate amount of his monthly income or his daughter’s
monthly income.
[28]
The dilemma of this Court is that the second respondent cannot afford
the monthly instalments
payable under the home loan agreement, the
arrears are increasing and the second respondent does not have fixed
or even stable
employment or a stable source of income from which he
can pay the monthly instalments and liquidate the arrears within a
reasonable
time thereof. The second respondent to date has failed to
enter into an agreement with the applicant in respect of payment of
the
monthly instalments and liquidation of the outstanding arrears.
[29]
Furthermore, the second respondent did not provide details of any
assistance that his daughter
might probably be able to proffer to the
situation by way of rental.
[30]
Whilst the
outstanding arrears are relatively low, the applicant has a
contractual right to exercise its security especially in
circumstances where the respondent is without means to pay the
monthly instalment and liquidate the arrears over a reasonable period
of time. Notwithstanding the relatively low amount of the arrears,
they are increasing and I cannot find that the applicant’s
application is an abuse of this Court’s process. See in this
regard
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Folscher & Another and similar matters
[12]
and
Jaftha
v Schoeman; Van Rooyn v Stoltz.
[13]
[31]
The market
value of the immovable property is R625 000.00 whilst the
municipal valuation is R375 000.00. The arrear rates
and taxes
amount to R43 858.27. The applicant sought an order for
execution and a reserve price of R306 141.73. The second
respondent alleged that a reserve price of R331 141.73 was
appropriate and fair to the respondents.
[14]
[32]
The second respondent also sought an order that execution be stayed
for six months so as to enable
the immovable property to be sold
privately.
[33]
Execution of the immovable property will not serve in my view to deny
the second respondent his
right to adequate housing along with that
of his family members as both he and his daughter have some income.
This is evidenced
by the second respondent’s allegations and by
the payments under the home loan, albeit that they are inconsistent
and in
amounts less than the required instalments under the mortgage
bond. Notwithstanding, the second respondent together with assistance
from his daughter will be in a position to pay for cheaper
accommodation, albeit not a house of their own or accommodation owned
by them.
[34]
I am inclined in the circumstances of this matter to permit a stay of
execution for a limited
period in order to assist the second
respondent to obtain alternate accommodation and to attempt to sell
the immovable property
privately, if at all possible. However, I am
not minded to stall the execution process for six months given that
payment by the
second respondent of the mortgage bond instalments is
inconsistent and less than the required monthly instalment. A stay of
execution
for a period of four (4) months will be appropriate and
ordered by me.
[35]
Furthermore, the reserve price for any sale in execution that does
transpire in the future, regard
being had to the stay of execution
for four months, will be the sum of R320 000.00.
[36]
Accordingly, an order is granted against the first and second
respondents, jointly and severally
the one paying the other to be
absolved, in the following terms:
1.
Payment of the sum of R276 906.21;
2.
Interest thereon at the rate of 9.57% nominal per annum calculated
daily and compounded
monthly with effect from 1 August 2022 to
date of payment, both days inclusive;
3.
Declaring the immovable property known as Erf 3[...] M[...] Extension
1[...] Township,
Registration Division I.Q, the Province of Gauteng
measuring 260 (two hundred and sixty) square metres held by deed of
transfer
T[...] specially executable;
4.
The Registrar of this Court is authorised to issue a warrant of
attachment herein;
5.
The Sheriff of the above Honourable Court is authorised to execute
the warrant of attachment
herein;
6.
The immovable property of the/ respondents shall be sold by the
Sheriff subject to
reserve price of R320 000.00;
7.
The effect of paragraphs 4, 5 and 6 of this order are suspended for a
period of four
(4) months from the date of this judgment, being
29 January 2024, in order to permit the second respondent
to locate
alternate accommodation and to permit the immovable
property to be sold privately by the second respondent. If no
agreement of
sale has been secured by the end of this four month
period, the orders for execution in terms of paragraphs 4, 5 and 6 of
this
order will automatically take effect.
8.
The respondents are ordered to pay the costs as between
attorney and client.
9.
The respondents are advised that the provisions of section 129(3)(a)
and (4) of
the National Credit Act, 34 of 2004 (“the NCA”)
may apply to the judgment granted in favour of the applicant. The
respondents
may prevent the sale of the immovable property if the
respondents pay to the applicant all of the arrear amounts owing to
the applicant,
together with the applicant’s permitted default
charges and reasonable costs of enforcing the agreement up to the
time of
re-instatement, prior to the property being sold in
execution.
10.
The arrear amounts and the enforcement costs referred to in paragraph
7 may be obtained from the applicant.
The respondents are
advised that the arrear amount is not the full amount of the judgment
debt that the amount owing by the
respondents to the applicant,
without reference to the accelerated amount.
CRUTCHFIELD
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be
29 January 2024
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADV.
H SALANI
INSTRUCTED
BY:
VAN
HULSTEYNS ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV.
J LIEBENBERG
INSTRUCTED
BY:
ALLAN
LEVIN & ASSOCIATES
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
24
January 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
29
January 2024
[1]
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2014 (3) SA 56
(CC) (‘’
Kubyana
”).
[2]
Amcoal
Collieries Ltd v Truter
1990
(1) SA 1 (A).
[3]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Sawyer
[2018]
ZAGP 662 (14 December 2018).
[4]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Mokebe
2018
(6) SA 3492 (GP).
[5]
Shackleton
Credit Management v Microzone Trading
2010
(5) SA 112
(KZP) para 14.
[6]
Rees
& Another v Investec Bank Ltd
2014
(4) SA 220 (SCA).
[7]
Nkatha
v Firstrand Bank Ltd
2016 (4) SA 257
(CC) (“
Nkatha
”).
[8]
Standard
Bank of South Africa v Saunderson & Others
2006 (2) SA 264
(SCA) para 2.
[9]
Rossouw
& Another v Firstrand Bank Ltd
2010
(6) SA 439
(SCA) para 48;
Investec
Bank Ltd v W.S.M
(30110/19)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 333 (7 July 2020).
[10]
See CaseLines 14-20.
[11]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Limited
1976 (1) SA 418.
[12]
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Folscher & Another and similar matters
2011
(4) SA 314
GMP.
[13]
Jaftha
v Schoeman; Van Rooyn v Stoltz
2005
(2) SA 140 (CC).
[14]
Changing
Tides 17 (Pty) Ltd v Muriritirwa and Another
(5290/2019)
[2020]
ZAGPPHC 132 (7 April 2020).
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