Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 119South Africa
Rhenus Logistics Proprietary Limited v Good To Go Trading CC (2022/021528) [2024] ZAGPJHC 119 (5 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 February 2024
Headnotes
Summary Judgment is granted in favour of the Plaintiff against the Defendant as follows:
Judgment
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## Rhenus Logistics Proprietary Limited v Good To Go Trading CC (2022/021528) [2024] ZAGPJHC 119 (5 February 2024)
Rhenus Logistics Proprietary Limited v Good To Go Trading CC (2022/021528) [2024] ZAGPJHC 119 (5 February 2024)
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sino date 5 February 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2022-021528
(1) REPORTABLE:
NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
05/2/2024
In
the matter between:
RHENUS
LOGISTICS PROPRIETARY LIMITED (formerly WORLD NET LOGISTICS
PROPRIETARY LIMITED)
Plaintiff/Plaintiff
and
GOOD
TO GO TRADING CC
Defendant/Defendant
JUDGMENT
CORAM:
NOWITZ AJ
INTRODUCTION
1.
This
is an Application for Summary Judgment, where the Plaintiff’s
cause of action is based on an Acknowledgement of Debt
entered into
between the Plaintiff and the Defendant on
21
June 2018
(“the
AOD”).
[1]
2.
The salient terms of the AOD are summarised
below:
2.1.
The Defendant acknowledged that it is indebted to the Plaintiff in an
amount
of
R1, 237, 912.88
(“the Capital Sum”),
plus interest calculated at 2% above the prime lending rate of the
Plaintiff’s bankers,
from time to time;
2.2.
the Defendant undertook to make payment to the Plaintiff on the
following bases:
2.2.1.
equal
monthly instalments of an amount of R25, 000.00, with the first
payment to be made on or before
10
May 2018
,
and thereafter each instalment is to be paid on the 10
th
of
each month until the full outstanding amount is repaid to the
Plaintiff;
[2]
2.2.2.
interest would be paid as follows:
2.2.2.1.
no
interest for the first 6 months;
[3]
2.2.2.2.
thereafter,
for the following 6 months, interest would be payable at a rate of 6%
per annum;
[4]
2.2.2.3.
thereafter
interest would be payable at a rate of 2% above the prime lending
rate of the Plaintiff’s bankers;
[5]
2.2.3.
If
the Defendant defaulted on any of its obligations under the AOD the
full outstanding balance would immediately become due, owing
and
payable to the Plaintiff;
[6]
2.2.4.
The
Defendant warranted that, at the date of signing the AOD, its annual
turnover and/or asset value exceeded the threshold contemplated
in
section 4 of the National Credit Act, 34 of 2005 (“the
NCA”);
[7]
2.2.5.
The
AOD is the whole agreement between the parties;
[8]
2.2.6.
No
variation of the AOD will be binding on the parties unless agreed in
writing and signed by both parties;
[9]
2.2.7.
The
Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff’s costs of litigation on a
scale as between attorney and client.
[10]
3.
The
Defendant made payment of a total amount of
R555,
000.00
to
the Plaintiff and thereafter, from
September
2018
to
June
2022
[11]
,
failed to make payment in accordance with its obligations in the AOD.
4.
The
full outstanding amount claimed by the Plaintiff in these Summary
Judgment proceedings is thus
R682,
912.88
,
[12]
plus
interest calculated as per the AOD.
THE
DEFENCE
5.
The
Defendant alleges that it has a
bona
fide
defence, which may be
summarised as follows:
5.1.
the
Defendant’s defence is set out in the Plea
[13]
as
is amplified in the Opposing Affidavit;
5.2.
the
AOD was proposed by the Plaintiff due to services rendered by the
Plaintiff to the Defendant in terms of a “business application
form” and agreement reached between the parties on
29
January 2015
[14]
.
A copy of this agreement is attached to the Plea marked "
GTG
1
'
[15]
;
5.3.
the
business application form is the underlying
causa
of
the AOD and is a credit agreement as is envisaged by the
National
Credit Act, Act
34 of 2005 (the NCA), the following provisions of
which are relevant
[16]
:
5.3.1.
Credit
limit requested in Rands: R 300 000-00.
5.3.2.
Gross
asset value more than R 2 million: No.
5.3.3.
Annual
turnover more than R 2 million: No;
5.4.
to
allow the Defendant to become indebted to the Plaintiff in the amount
of R 1 237 912-88 (the capital sum in the AOD) or R 682 912-88
(the amount claimed in the summons), is over the credit limit
requested by the Defendant and constitutes reckless lending in terms
of the NCA;
5.5.
Section
8(1)
of the NCA provides that an agreement constitutes a ‘credit
agreement’ if it is,
inter
alia
,
a ‘
credit
transaction
’
.
A ‘
credit
transaction
’
includes
an agreement in terms of which payment of an amount owed by one
person to another is deferred and any charge, fee or interest
is
payable to the credit provider in respect of the agreement, or the
amount that has been deferred
(s 8(4)(f)).
As was stated in the Plea,
the costs of drawing up the AOD was borne by the Defendant
[17]
.
The AOD is per definition a credit agreement in terms of
s8(4)(f)
;
1.25cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; widows: 2; orphans: 2">
5.6.
the
AOD ought to be declared to be a reckless credit agreement as
envisaged in
Section 83
of the NCA for the following reasons:
5.6.1.
the
Plaintiff failed to conduct an assessment as required by
section 81
(2) of the NCA; alternatively,
5.6.2.
the
Plaintiff, having conducted an assessment as required by
section 81
(2), entered into the credit agreement with the Defendant despite the
fact that the preponderance of information available to the
Plaintiff
indicated that:
5.6.2.1.
the
Defendant was already, at the time of entering
the
AOD, indebted to the Plaintiff for an amount exceeding the credit
facility granted on 29 January 2015; alternatively,
5.6.2.2.
entering
into that credit agreement would make
the
Defendant over-indebted
[18]
.
THE
LAW ON SUMMARY JUDGMENT
6.
Rule 32(1)(a)
provides that the Plaintiff may, after the
Defendant has delivered a Plea, apply to court for Summary Judgment
on each of
such claims in the Summons as is on a liquid document,
together with any claim for interest and costs.
7.
Rule
32(3)(b)
requires a defendant to “satisfy the Court by
affidavit … that he has a bona fide defence to the action;
such affidavit
… shall disclose
fully
the nature and grounds of the defence and the material facts relied
upon therefor
.”
The statement of material facts must “
be
sufficiently full to persuade the court that what the defendant has
alleged, if it is proved at the trial,
will
constitute a defence to the plaintiff’s claim.
”
[19]
8.
It
is incumbent upon a defendant to formulate his opposition to the
Summary Judgment Application and to do so (a) with a sufficient
degree of clarity to enable the Court to ascertain whether he has
deposed to a defence which, if proved at trial, would constitute
a
good defence to the action;
[20]
and
(b) with reference to the Plea that was delivered. In this regard a
defendant must engage meaningfully with the material
in the
plaintiff’s affidavit supporting the Application for Summary
Judgment.
[21]
9.
Thus,
a defendant will fail if it is clear from his Affidavit that he is
advancing a defence simply to delay the obtaining a judgment
to which
the defendant well knows that the plaintiff is justly entitled.
[22]
10.
In
NPGS
Protection and Security Services CC & another v FirstRand Bank
Ltd
[23]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held as follows:
“
Rule
32(3)
of the uniform rules requires an opposing affidavit to disclose
fully the nature and grounds of the defence and the material facts
relied upon therefor. To stave off summary judgment
,
a defendant cannot content him or himself with bald denials, for
example, that it is not clear how the amount claimed was made
up
.
Something more is required. If a defendant disputes the
amount
claimed, he or she should say so and set out a factual basis for such
denial
.
This could be done by giving examples of payments made by them which
have not been credited to their account.”
11.
The Defendant is therefore required to disclose fully the nature and
grounds of its
bona fide
defence to the action, and
the material facts relied upon therefor.
THE
DEFENCES RAISED BY THE DEFENDANT
12. The
Defendant’s Affidavit Resisting Summary Judgment thus raises
the following defences to the action:
12.1.
the
Plaintiff
did not comply with Rule 18(6) of the Uniform Rules of Court as one
page is missing from the AOD which is attached to
the POC.
[24]
12.2.
the
NCA
does apply to the AOD;
[25]
Rule
18(6) of the Uniform Rules of Court
13.
If
there is a material defect in any of the formalities required by
the
Rules
of Court, the Court should not readily grant Summary Judgment. On the
other hand, where it is clear that the Rules have substantially
been
complied with and there is no prejudice to the Defendant, the Court
should condone a failure to comply with a technical requirement
of
the Rules.
[26]
14.
Technical
objections to less than perfect procedural steps
should
not be permitted, in the absence of prejudice, to interfere with the
expeditious and, if possible, inexpensive decision of
cases on their
real merits.'
[27]
15.
The
Defendant has suffered no prejudice that could not be cured by the
provisions of rule 35(12)
and
rule 35(14), both of which entitle a litigant to call for such
documents, as may be referred to in a pleading, before
pleading.
[28]
IN casu,
neither subrule was invoked by the Defendant.
16.
The
Defendant has not shown that it has suffered any prejudice by the
non-compliance, and accordingly the Plaintiff’s non-compliance
with rule 18(6) ought to be condoned.
[29]
17.
During the course of argument, this defence was to all intents and
purposes abandoned by the Defendant. In the premises,
the Plaintiff’s
non-compliance can be condoned.
The
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
18.
Section 4(1)(a)(i)
of the NCA provides:
Subject
to
sections 5
and
6
, this Act
applies to every credit
agreement
between parties dealing at arm's length and made
within, or having an effect within, the Republic,
except a
credit agreement
in terms of which the
consumer is a
juristic person whose asset value or annual turnover,
together
with the combined asset value or annual turnover of all related
juristic persons
, at the time the agreement is made, equals or
exceeds the threshold value
determined by the Minister in
terms of section 7 (1)”
(own
emphasis)
19.
Section 4(2)(a) of the NCA provides:
“
the
asset value or annual turnover of a juristic person at the time a
credit agreement is made, is
the
value stated as such by that juristic person
at
the time it applies for or enters into that agreement”
20.
Section 5(1)(d) of the NCA provides that Chapter 4, Part D applies
with respect to an incidental credit agreement, save
to the extent
that it deals with reckless credit.
21.
An “
incidental credit agreement
” is defined
inter
alia
as “
an agreement, irrespective of its form, in
terms of which... goods or services are to be provided to a consumer
over a period of
time and ... a fee or charge of interest became
payable when payment of an amount charged in terms of that account
was not made
on or before a determined period or date
”.
22.
In
casu
, Clause 3 of the Terms and Conditions agreed to by the
Defendant (
Caselines 001-37
) provided for interest to be
charged on amounts not paid on due date, at 2% above the prime rate
charged by the Plaintiff’s
Bankers.
23.
In
Ratlou v Man Financial Services SA (Pty) Ltd
(1309/17)
[2019] ZASCA 49
;
2019 (5) SA 117
(SCA), the Court found that the
purposive approach in determining whether the NCA was applicable to
settlement agreements, is the
correct approach:
“
[24]
MAN’s reliance on three cases in which our courts have used the
purposive approach in determining whether the NCA was
applicable to
settlement agreements, is well placed. In
Grainco
(Pty) Ltd v Broodryk NO & others
[5]
the court found that although the settlement agreement referred to
deferral of payment and interest the agreement did not constitute
a
credit transaction because the underlying transaction was a damages
claim in respect of which the Plaintiff, by agreement, afforded
the
first, second, and third Defendants deferment of payment. It was held
that the transaction did not fall within the business
of moneylending
and the furnishing of credit, in the ordinary sense of the word. The
NCA was not intended to encompass an underlying
causa of the
postponement of payment of damages.
[25]
In
Hattingh v Hattingh
[6] a settlement agreement in which
two brothers terminated their business relationship and provided for
payment of R6,6 million
in annual instalments of R734 000,00 together
with interest on the capital was found not to fall within the ambit
of the NCA. The
court found specifically that there had been no
credit provider-consumer relationship. This and the parties’
intention viewed
against the background of the objects of the NCA
showed that it could not have been the intention of the Legislature
that an agreement
such as the impugned agreement should be regarded
as a credit agreement. Although the one brother, prima facie, fell
within the
definition of a credit provider as intended in the NCA it
could not – given the purpose and the context of the NCA –
have been the intention of the Legislature that the brother would be
regarded as a credit provider subject to the obligations imposed
by
the NCA.
[26]
In
Ribeiro & another v Slip Knot Investments
777
(Pty) Ltd[7] it is found that the underlying causa remained extant
despite settlement and that the two agreements were
interdependent.
In this case the underlying agreement was a damages claim pursuant to
the repossession and re-sale of the vehicles.
There was also no
credit provider – consumer relationship and the settlement
agreement and the underlying agreements were
interdependent. There
can only be one conclusion, that the NCA was not designed to regulate
settlement agreements where the underlying
agreements or cause, would
not have been considered by the Act.”
ANALYSIS
24.
There
is no doubt that the Defendant is fully aware of the entire contents
of the AOD. It does not deny its signature thereof and
its partial
performance in terms thereof is common cause. Further:
24.1.
the
Defendant made
17
payments between
September
2018
and
June 2022
and never once raised
the NCA defence until sued for breach of and non-compliance with the
provisions of the AOD;
24.2.
the
Defendant specifically warranted in Clause 6.1 of the AOD (Caselines
001-18) that the NCA was
not of application. Even if the Credit
Application form was relevant and interdependent (which I find is not
the case), then this
constituted a novation, alternatively, a
variation of this specific provision. Moreover, Clause 6.4 of the
AOD reflects that
the contents of the AOD, which was signed 3
years after the Credit Application form was completed, records that
same constitutes
the entire contract.
25.
I
am of the view that
Ratlou v Man Financial Services
SA (Pty) Ltd
is the correct reflection of our law as it
currently stands and that NCA is not applicable to settlement
agreements or compromises,
which is what the present AOD is.
26.
It
is the Plaintiff’s contention that the cause of action is based
on the AOD, that the Defendant is bound by the terms of
same and
cannot rely on the prior agreement.
[30]
The
Defendant submits that the agreements do not exist independently from
each other and avers that “(20)…
The
compromise therefore remained linked to the underlying causa, ... The
artificiality of ignoring them is self-evident.”
27.
In my view,
Ratlou
makes it clear that the
agreements do not exist independently and underlying
causa
cannot
be ignored. However, having said that, I find:
27.1.
that the underlying
causa
, ie the 2015 business
application form does constitute an
incidental credit
agreement
and accordingly, the Defendant’s reliance on
reckless lending as a defence cannot succeed;
27.2.
that if the business application form and the AOD are to be read
together, then the AOD varied or
novated the business application
form
inter alia
insofar as the Defendant’s
asset value is concerned. Even if there has been no variation, or
novation, the impediment
highlighted in
27.1
above
remains.
28.
Accordingly,
for these reasons, I find that the NCA, including its provisions
relating to reckless lending
are not of application and that this
defence must fail as well.
ORDER
29.
In
the circumstances, I make the following Order:
Summary
Judgment is granted in favour of the Plaintiff against the Defendant
as follows:
29.1.
Payment
of the sum of R682 912.88;
29.2.
Interest
on the outstanding balance as at 11 November 2018, at the rate of 6%
per annum for 6 months; and thereafter, interest on
the outstanding
balance as at 11 May 2019 at the rate of 2% above the prime lending
rate of the Plaintiff’s bankers, until
the entire balance
outstanding is paid in full;
29.3.
Costs
of suit on the Attorney and client scale.
M
NOWITZ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF
SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
5
February 2024
APPEARANCES
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Adv
L F Laughland
Instructed
by Harris Billings Attorneys
FOR
DEFENDANT:
Adv
Carmen Botha
Instructed
by Gerhard Botha Attorneys
[1]
Annexure
“
A”
to the POC, pp 01-13 to 01-22
[2]
AOD,
clause 4.1.1
[3]
AOD,
clause 4.1.2.1
[4]
AOD,
clause 4.1.2.2
[5]
AOD,
clause 4.1.2.3
[6]
AOD,
clauses 5.1.2 and 5.1.3
[7]
AOD,
clause 6.1
[8]
AOD,
clause 6.4
[9]
AOD,
clause 6.5
[10]
AOD,
clause 6.10.2
[11]
POC,
para 7, pp 01-10 to 01-11
[12]
POC,
para 9, p 01-11
[13]
Caselines
01/2, p 01-27 to 01-37
[14]
Plea,
paragraph 6, p 01-29
[15]
Caselines,
p 01-36 to 01-37
[16]
Caselines,
p 01-36
[17]
Plea,
Paragraph 26, p 01-32
[18]
Plea,
paragraph 36, p 01-33
[19]
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976
(2) SA 266 (T).
[20]
See
District
Bank v Hoosain
1984
(4) SA 544
(C).
[21]
Saglo
Auto (Pty) ltd v Black Shades Investments (Pty) Ltd
2021
(2) SA 587
(GP) at paragraph [55].
[22]
Skead
v Swanepoel
1949
(4) SA 763
(T) at 766 - 7.
[23]
(314/2019)
[2019] ZASCA 94
(6 June 2019).
[24]
Defendant’s
affidavit, para 12, p 02-9
[25]
Defendant’s
affidavit, paras 5 to 9, pp 02-8 to 02-9
[26]
Charsley
v Avbob (Begrafnisdiens) Bpk
1975
(1) SA 891
(E) at 893C-D
[27]
Trans-African
Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
1956
(2) SA 273
(A), at 278F-G
[28]
Nxumalo
v First Link Insurance Brokers (Pty) Ltd
2003
(2) SA 620
(T) para [9]
[29]
Dass
and Others NNO v Lowewest Trading (Pty) Ltd
2011
(1) SA 48
(KZD)
at
para [16]
[30]
Founding
affidavit paragraph 9.1, p 02-31
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