Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 166South Africa
Firstrand Bank Limited v Petezake (2023-022639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 166 (26 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 February 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Suretyship – application for judgment – principal debtor breachd loan agreements – acceleration clause – whole amounts owing, due and payable after loans ‘called up’ – not open to principal debtor and Surety to only pay up the arrears – judgment granted against Surety –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Firstrand Bank Limited v Petezake (2023-022639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 166 (26 February 2024)
Firstrand Bank Limited v Petezake (2023-022639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 166 (26 February 2024)
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sino date 26 February 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
NOT
REPORTABLE
2.
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
DATE
:
26
th
February 2024
(1)
CASE NO
:
2023-022639
In the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
And
NYONI
,
PETEZAKE
Respondent
(2)
CASE NO
:
2023-24656
In the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
And
ALORA
PALLETS (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
FirstRand Bank v Nyoni (2023-022639); FirstRand Bank v Alora
Pallets (2023-024656)
[2024] ZAGPJHC ----
(26 February
2024)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
13 and 14 February
2024
Delivered:
26 February 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 26
February 2024.
Summary:
Suretyship – application for judgment –
principal debtor breachd loan agreements – acceleration clause
–
whole amounts owing, due and payable after loans ‘called
up’ – not open to principal debtor and Surety to only
pay
up the arrears – judgment granted against Surety –
Winding-up
application – commercial insolvency ground for winding-up order
– debt owing, due and payable in full after
loan ‘called
up’ – no longer open to company to pay off loan in
instalments – whole amount of loan should
be paid – if
not, company deemed unable to pay its debts and is therefore
commercially insolvent – winding-up order
granted.
ORDER
(1)
In the matter under case number:
2023-022639
,
judgment is granted in favour of the applicant against the respondent
for: -
(a)
Payment of the sum of R8 495 755.87,
together with interest thereon at 11.75% (the current prime interest
rate) subject
to change, calculated daily and compounded monthly in
arrears, from 8 February 2024 to date of final payment, both days
inclusive.
(b)
Payment of the sum of R863 984.35,
together with interest thereon at 18.75% (the current prime interest
rate plus 7%), subject
to change, calculated daily and compounded
monthly in arrears, from 8 February 2024 to date of final payment,
both days inclusive.
(c)
Payment of the costs of this application on
the scale as between attorney and own client scale.
(2)
In the matter under case number:
2023-024656
,
the following order is granted: -
(a)
The respondent is placed under final
winding-up in the hands of the Master of the High Court of South
Africa.
(b)
The costs of this application shall be
costs in the winding-up of the respondent.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
On 13 and 14
February 2024 respectively the above two opposed applications came
before me in the opposed motion court of that week.
The applicant in
both matters is FirstRand Bank Limited (FirstRand Bank), which lent
and advanced monies to the respondent in the
second application
(Alora Pallets) pursuant to and in terms of a loan agreement dated 15
October 2019 / 18 November 2019, a subsequent
‘Re-Advance and
Future-Use Restatement Agreement’ dated 19 March 2020 and a
facility agreement dated 29 September 2022.
On 15 October 2019 the
respondent in the first application (Mr Nyoni) bound himself in
favour of FirstRand Bank as surety
in
solidum
and as co-principal debtor for the whole of Alora Pallets’
indebtedness to the bank. In the second application FirstRand
Bank
applies for the final winding-up of Alora Pallets and in the first
application the bank applies for a monetary judgment against
the Mr
Nyoni on the basis of the suretyship.
[2].
Both these
applications are grounded by Alora Pallets’ indebtedness to
FirstRand Bank. It is accordingly convenient to deal
with these two
matters in one judgment, even though there has been no formal
consolidation of the applications.
[3].
By September
2022, Alora Pallets had fallen into arrears with its account with the
bank to the tune of about R127 000, and
it was placed on terms
by the bank to bring its arrears up to date within seven days. By 2
November 2022, the amount of the arrears
had increased to R260 000
and the bank, as per a letter of demand of that day, ‘called
up’ both the loan agreement
and the credit facility, as it was
entitled to do, and demanded payment of the total amounts outstanding
on both accounts, which,
at that stage, amounted to a sum in excess
of R9.6 million.
[4].
On
6 December 2022 FirstRand Bank’s attorneys addressed to Alora
Palettes a notice in terms of s 345(1)(a)(i)
[1]
of the Companies Act
[2]
,
demanding payment of the amounts payable in terms of the loan
agreement and the credit facility, totalling over R9.7 million.
On
the same day a letter of demand was addressed to Mr Nyoni, demanding
from him the said sum on the basis of the suretyship given
by him in
favour of FirstRand Bank. Subsequent attempts by the parties and, in
particular, Mr Nyoni, to resolve the impasse, came
to naught. And
during March and April 2023, FirstRand Bank proceeded with the issue
of the above applications against Mr Nyoni
and Alora Pallets. At that
point, Alora Pallets was indebted to FirstRand Bank in the total sum
of R9 458 986.81 –
R8
573 783
.61
in respect of the loan account and R885 203.20 relating to the
credit facility.
[5].
During the
period from 6 December 2022, when the final demands were made by
FirstRand Bank’s attorneys, to 14 June 2023, when
the
respondents’ answering affidavits in the two applications were
deposed to by Mr Nyoni, Alora paid in total R1 245 384.94
on account of its indebtedness to FirstRand Bank. Those payments
would have brought the accounts up to date at that stage, but
for the
fact both accounts had been ‘called up’.
[6].
The issue to
be decided in the first application is simply whether a case is made
out on behalf of FirstRand Bank for judgment against
Mr Nyoni on the
basis of the suretyship signed by him in favour of the bank. In the
second application, the main question to be
considered by the Court
is whether Alora Pallets is commercially insolvent.
The
First Application against Mr Nyoni
[7].
Mr Nyoni
opposes the application for judgment against him on a number of
bases, the most notable of which is his contention that
Alora Pallets
has, before and since the launching of this application, made
payments on account of its indebtedness to FirstRand
Bank, thereby
extinguishing the arrears.
[8].
As correctly
submitted by Mr Horn, who appeared on behalf of FirstRand Bank in
both applications, whilst these further payments
should be taken into
account in the amount of the monetary judgment to be granted against
Mr Nyoni, it does not detract from the
fact that, after the debts
were ‘called up’ by the bank, the whole amounts
outstanding on both accounts, became owing
due and payable. In the
absence of payment by Alora Pallets of the full amounts owing, due
and payable, the bank was entitled to
insist on payment of the full
outstanding balances. This means that it is no longer open to Alora
Pallets to pay the debt in instalments.
It is also no longer possible
to extinguish the arrears. The entire debt is now payable, not only
the arrears.
[9].
This, in turn,
means that the Mr Nyoni, as surety, is liable to the bank for payment
of the total of the amounts outstanding on
the two accounts.
[10].
The
other grounds raised by Mr Nyoni in opposition to the application
are, in sum, as follows: (a) First, he contends that the application
should be stayed pending the outcome of FirstRand’s application
for Alora’s winding-up premised on its inability to
pay its
debts; (b) Second, Mr Nyoni contends that, should the liquidation
application and the present application succeed, FirstRand
will end
up with two judgments for payment of the same debt –
essentially a double recovery; (c) Third, Mr Nyoni alleges
that his
liability as surety will only arise if Alora is liquidated and its
assets are insufficient to pay its debts; and (d) Fourth,
Mr Nyoni
claims that the National Credit Act
[3]
(‘the NCA’) applies to the facility agreement concluded
between FirstRand and Alora Pallets and, therefore, to the
suretyship
too. If the Court finds that this is not so, then Mr Nyoni challenges
the constitutionality of the applicable provisions
of the NCA.
[11].
I shall make
short thrift of these defences of Mr Nyoni and simply say that they
are misguided and bad in law.
[12].
The benefit of
excussion
is the right of a surety (other than a co-principal debtor) against
the creditor to demand that the creditor first proceed against
the
principal debtor with a view to obtaining payment, if necessary, by
execution of assets, before turning to the surety for payment
of the
debt (or as much of it as remains unpaid). By virtue of the fact that
the benefit of excussion does not avail Mr Nyoni,
he is immediately
liable, jointly and severally, for the indebtedness of Alora Pallets
to FirstRand Bank. This is so if regard
is had to the express
provisions of the suretyship agreement, which provides in the
relevant part of clause 11 as follows: -
‘…
[FirstRand]
may demand that I/we immediately pay any amounts that are due and
payable along with interest, costs and fees. If I/we
do not either
pay [FirstRand] or make arrangements with [FirstRand] to its
satisfaction, [FirstRand] may take legal steps …’.
[13].
As for the
constitutionality challenge to certain provisions of the NCA, it was
contended on behalf of FirstRand Bank that the purported
constitutional challenge is defective. I agree with these
contentions. Firstly, Uniform Rule of Court 16A was not complied with
in that Mr Nyoni failed to give notice to the registrar of the
challenge at the time of filing his answering affidavit. This is
to
afford interested parties the opportunity to respond to the
challenge. Secondly, the challenge is impermissibly vague. Mr Nyoni
says that the constitutional challenge is aimed at section 129 of the
NCA, but section 129 provides for notice to consumers prior
to
enforcement proceedings.
[14].
The challenge
seems rather to be directed at the provisions which exclude the
application of the NCA to certain agreements. Even
if this can be
discerned from a benevolent reading of the answering affidavit, the
grounds of the challenge are not provided. Critically,
Mr Nyoni fails
to indicate which section of the Constitution he relies upon or how
the relevant provisions of the NCA are in violation
thereof. A
fundamental principle of constitutional litigation is that such a
challenge must be explicit and requires accuracy in
the
identification of the provision of legislation that is challenged on
the basis that it is inconsistent with the Constitution.
If these
requirements are not complied with, the challenge must fail.
[15].
Accordingly,
the constitutional validity challenge is still born.
[16].
For all these
reasons, the application for judgment against Mr Nyoni should
succeed.
The
Second Application against Alora Pallets
[17].
In the second
application, as I have already indicated, FirstRand Bank applies for
the winding-up of Alora Pallets on the basis
that it is, and is
deemed to be, unable to pay its debts as contemplated in s 345 read
with s 344(f) of the Companies Act.
[18].
Alora Pallets
opposes the winding-up application on the basis of a number of
defences. These defences are bad in law and without
merit.
[19].
So, for
example, it is contended by Alora Pallets that the application for
its winding-up should be stayed pending the outcome of
an application
for a money judgment against its surety, Mr Nyoni. At a fundamental
level, this stance is misguided. There is no
basis in law for staying
the winding-up application pending the outcome of the application for
a money judgment against Mr Nyoni.
[20].
Moreover,
Alora Palettes contends that it is factually and commercially
solvent. For purposes of this application, FirstRand Bank
is required
to demonstrate only commercial insolvency. In that regard, it was
held by the SCA in
Boschpoort
Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Ltd
[4]
as follows: -
‘
That
a company's commercial insolvency is a ground that will justify an
order for its liquidation has been a reality of law which
has served
us well through the passage of time. The reasons are not hard to
find: the valuation of assets, other than cash, is
a notoriously
elastic and often highly subjective one; the liquidity of assets is
often more viscous than recalcitrant debtors
would have a court
believe; more often than not, creditors do not have knowledge of the
assets of a company that owes them money
– and cannot be
expected to have; and courts are more comfortable with readily
determinable and objective tests such as whether
a company is able to
meet its current liabilities than with abstruse economic exercises as
to the valuation of a company's assets.’
[21].
A company is
conclusively deemed unable to pay its debts when it fails to
positively respond to a demand in terms of section 345
of the
Companies Act. The phrase ‘unable to pay its debts’
connotes insolvency in the commercial sense, namely
an inability to
meet its day-to-day liabilities, even though the company’s
assets may exceed its liabilities.
[22].
In casu
,
an amount in excess of R9.6 million is presently owing, due and
payable by Alora Pallets to FirstRand Bank. It is not able to
pay
this amount, which makes it commercially insolvent in that it is
‘unable to pay its debts’. What is more is that
Alora
Pallets, which failed to comply with the s 345 demand from the bank,
is conclusively deemed to unable to pay its debts.
[23].
Alora
Pallets also contend that there exist exceptional circumstances which
would justify my exercising my discretion not to liquidate
the
company. In that regard, Mr Horn referred me to the SCA decision in
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet Management (Pty) Ltd
[5]
,
in which it was held as follows: -
‘…
generally
speaking, an unpaid creditor has a right,
ex
debito justitiae
, to a winding-up order
against the respondent company that has not discharged that debt. …
the discretion of a court to
refuse to grant a winding-up order where
an unpaid creditor applies therefor is a “very narrow one”
that is rarely
exercised and then in special or unusual circumstances
only.’
[24].
It is
contended by Alora Pallets that the exceptional circumstances consist
inter alia
of it being a black owned business, the fact that its forty-seven or
so employees would be rendered unemployable by a winding-up
order and
the fact that its business was adversely affected by the Covid-19
pandemic.
[25].
In my view,
these circumstances are not exceptional and definitely not so
exceptional as to warrant the court exercising its discretion
in
favour of Alora Pallets.
Conclusion and Costs
[26].
Accordingly,
the relief sought by FirstRand Bank in both applications should be
granted.
[27].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[6]
.
[28].
I can think of no reason why I should
deviate from this general rule in the first application. The costs
order in the second application
should be in accordance with the
standard costs order in liquidation applications.
[29].
Furthermore, in the agreements in question
provision was made for costs to be paid by Mr Nyoni on the scale as
between attorney
and own client in the event of the bank instituting
legal proceedings to enforce its rights in terms of the said
contracts.
[30].
I therefore intend awarding costs in the
first application against Mr Nyoni in favour of the applicant on the
scale as between attorney
and own client. The costs of the second
application should be paid by the liquidated company.
Order
[31].
Accordingly, I make the following orders: -
(1)
In the matter under case number:
2023-022639
,
judgment is granted in favour of the applicant against the respondent
for: -
(a)
Payment of the sum of R8 495 755.87,
together with interest thereon at 11.75% (the current prime interest
rate) subject
to change, calculated daily and compounded monthly in
arrears, from 8 February 2024 to date of final payment, both days
inclusive.
(b)
Payment of the sum of R863 984.35,
together with interest thereon at 18.75% (the current prime interest
rate plus 7%), subject
to change, calculated daily and compounded
monthly in arrears, from 8 February 2024 to date of final payment,
both days inclusive.
(c)
Payment of the costs of this application on
the scale as between attorney and own client scale.
(2)
In the matter under case number:
2023-024656
,
the following order is granted: -
(a)
The respondent is placed under final
winding-up in the hands of the Master of the High Court of South
Africa.
(b)
The costs of this application shall be
costs in the winding-up of the respondent.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
13
th
and 14
th
February 2024
JUDGMENT DATE:
26
th
February 2024 – judgment handed down electronically.
FOR FIRSTRAND BANK
(APPLICANT IN BOTH MATTERS):
Advocate
N J Horn
INSTRUCTED BY:
Werksmans
Attorneys, Sandton
FOR THE RESPONDENTS IN
BOTH APPLICATIONS:
Adv
M Skhosana, together with Adv Sithole
INSTRUCTED BY:
M T
Raselo Incorporated, Mondeor, Johannesburg
[1]
Section 345(1)(a)(i) provides that ‘[a] company … shall
be deemed to be unable to pay its debts if –
(a)
a
creditor …, to whom the company is indebted in a sum not less
than one hundred rand then due –
(i)
has served on the company, by leaving the same at its registered
office, a demand requiring
the
company
to pay the sum so due; or
… …
and
the company … has for three weeks thereafter neglected to pay
the sum, or to secure or compound for it to the reasonable
satisfaction of the creditor; or …’.
[2]
Companies
Act, Act 61 of 1973.
[3]
National
Credit Act, Act 34 of 2005.
[4]
Boschpoort
Ondernemings (Pty) Ltd v Absa Bank Ltd
2014 (2) SA 518
(SCA) at para 17.
[5]
Afgri
Operations Ltd v Hamba Fleet Management (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 19
(SCA) at para 12.
[6]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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