Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 313South Africa
Capitec Bank Limited v Culverwell (2022-059460) [2024] ZAGPJHC 313 (27 March 2024)
Headnotes
by Deed of Transfer T10692/1987 (“the immovable property”)
Judgment
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## Capitec Bank Limited v Culverwell (2022-059460) [2024] ZAGPJHC 313 (27 March 2024)
Capitec Bank Limited v Culverwell (2022-059460) [2024] ZAGPJHC 313 (27 March 2024)
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sino date 27 March 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED YES/NO
In the two matters
between:
Case No: 2022-059460
Capitec Bank
Limited
Applicant
And
Allan Montague
Culverwell
Respondent
Case No: 2022-059522
Capitec Bank
Limited
Applicant
and
Bernice Elizabeth
Culverwell
First Respondent
Allan Montague
Culverwell
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
STRYDOM, J
[1]
This is the judgment in the two above
mentioned matters. The applicant in the first matter is Capitec Bank
Limited, hereinafter
referred to as the applicant, and the respondent
is Mr Culverwell.
[2]
In the second matter the applicant seeks an
order against Mrs Culverwell and Mr Culverwell. The case of the
applicant against Mr
and Mrs Culverwell are on all fours, with minor
differences relating,
inter alia,
on the extent of the amounts claimed. Accordingly,
the parties agreed that these two matters should be heard
simultaneously, and
that one judgment should be delivered by this
court. This is what this court intends doing.
[3]
The court will in this judgment first deal
with the application where relief is sought against Mr Culverwell and
thereafter in the
second application where relief is sought against
Mrs Culverwell and Mr Culverwell.
# The claim against Mr
Culverwell
The claim against Mr
Culverwell
[4]
The applicant seeks an order for payment
against Mr Culverwell in respect of the following credit facilities –
a) The sum of
R302,641.68 in respect of an overdraft facility conducted under
account No. 110001980;
b) An amount of
R286,896.98 in respect of a credit card facility with account No.
464478000002734;
c) An amount of
R55,320.43 in respect of a credit card facility made available by the
applicant to Mr Gabriel Molefe Mokgoro
(Mr Mokgoro) with account No.
4644780000033112 in respect of which Mr Culverwell signed a deed of
suretyship in favour of the applicant.
[5]
In addition the applicant seeks an order
declaring the following immovable property owned by Mr Culverwell
specially executable
–
Portion
151 (of 80) of the Farm Lot 2 No. 1673, Registration Division FU,
Province of KwaZulu-Natal, measuring 1203m
2
and held by
Deed of Transfer T10692/1987 (“the immovable property”)
# The applicant’s
case
The applicant’s
case
[6]
On 9 June 2015, the applicant granted an
overdraft facility of R250,000 to Mr Culverwell in terms of a written
overdraft facility
agreement.
[7]
I do not intend to repeat in this judgment
all the material terms of the overdraft facility agreement, suffice
to point out that
in terms of the overdraft facility agreement Mr
Culverwell,
inter alia,
undertook that any excess on the overdraft
facility, without prior arrangement with the applicant, shall be
construed as a breach
of the agreement which entitled the applicant
to cancel the agreement. Mr Culverwell had to pay his regular income
into the account
in relation to which the overdraft facility was
granted. Mr Culverwell agreed that a written certificate signed by a
manager whose
appointment need not be proved, will upon production,
constitute sufficient proof of the content thereof in any legal
proceedings.
The applicant was entitled to call up the overdraft
facility on demand.
[8]
The applicant avers that it has duly
complied with its obligations in terms of the overdraft facility
agreement but that Mr Culverwell
breached the overdraft facility
agreement as he allowed the limit of R250 000 to be exceeded.
[9]
The applicant, in compliance with the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (“NCA”) and in terms of
the agreement, drew the
default to the attention of Mr Culverwell.
Subsequent thereto, Mr Culverwell failed to remedy the breach and is
currently indebted
to the applicant in the sum of R302,641.68.
[10]
As far as the credit card facility granted
to Mr Culverwell is concerned, on the same date when the overdraft
facility was signed,
the applicant and Mr Culverwell conducted a
written agreement in terms whereof the applicant agreed to open a
credit card account
for and on behalf of Mr Culverwell.
[11]
The material terms of the credit card
agreement were,
inter alia
,
that:
a) The outstanding
debt in respect of the credit card would be repaid in monthly
instalments of no less than 10% of the balance
outstanding on the
card account from time to time.
b) The extent of
the indebtedness of Mr Culverwell could at any time be determined and
proved by a written certificate purporting
to have been signed by a
manager of the applicant, whose capacity and authority need not to be
proven.
[12]
Mr Culverwell breached the terms of the
credit card agreement and failed to make payment of the minimum
amounts required as and
when they became due, resulting in Mr
Culverwell exceeding the credit card maximum limit of R250,000.
[13]
The applicant drew the breach to the
attention of Mr Culverwell as required by the credit card agreement,
but Mr Culverwell failed
to remedy his breach and is currently
indebted to the applicant in an amount of R286,895.98.
[14]
Also on 9 June 2015, the applicant entered
into a written agreement with Mr Mokgoko (“the principal
debtor”) in terms
whereof the applicant agreed to open a credit
card account for and on behalf of the principal debtor.
[15]
The applicant was unable to annex a copy of
the signed written agreement as applicant alleged that the document
has been misplaced,
lost or inadvertently destroyed. The applicant
attached an unsigned copy of this agreement to its papers, the
material terms of
which are –
a) A credit card
account would be opened in the name of the principal debtor to a
maximum limit of R50,000;
b) The outstanding
debt in respect of the credit card would be repaid in monthly
instalments of no less than 10% outstanding
on the balance of the
card from time to time;
c) The balance
outstanding could be proven by a written certificate purporting to
have been signed by a manager of the applicant,
whose capacity and
authority need not to be proven.
[16]
In breach of the terms of the credit card
agreement, the principal debtor failed to pay the minimum payments
required as and when
they became due, resulting in the principal
debtor exceeding his maximum limit.
[17]
Despite a notice to remedy the breach, the
principal debtor has failed to do so and is presently indebted to the
applicant in the
amount of R55,320.43.
[18]
On 17 December 2015, Mr Culverwell bound
himself jointly and severally as surety and co-principal debtor with
the principal debtor
in solidum
for the due and punctual payment of all amounts
which may then or at any time thereafter become owing from whatever
cause arising
and for the due performance of every other obligation
which the principal debtor may be bound to perform in favour of the
applicant.
[19]
In terms of the Deed of Suretyship, Mr
Culverwell agreed that the amount claimable under the suretyship
would be limited to R50,000,
that he would pay the applicant’s
legal costs and that a certificate signed by a manager of the
applicant shall constitute
prima facie
proof of the facts stated.
[20]
As security for the due payment of all
amounts in respect of the credit facilities, Mr Culverwell declared
to bind specially the
immovable property as a first mortgage bond in
favour of the applicant.
[21]
The property is not the primary residence
of Mr Culverwell.
[22]
In terms of section 129(1)(a) of the NCA,
the applicant brought the breach of the agreement to the attention of
Mr Culverwell but
he remained in default of his obligations in terms
of the various facilities.
[23]
Due to Mr Culverwell’s continued
default, the applicant elected to cancel the various facility
agreements and informed Mr
Culverwell in writing by way of
termination letters.
# Mr Culverwell’s
case and findings
Mr Culverwell’s
case and findings
[24]
During argument, the thrust of Mr
Culverwell’s defence which crystallised is premised on the
averment that the various credit
agreements and the terms and
conditions attached thereto were not properly signed and accordingly,
the applicant has failed to
prove these agreements. Although further
defences were raised, these were not seriously persisted with, the
court will nevertheless
briefly deal with these further defences.
[25]
It was emphasised that the accounts, which
were opened pursuant to the facilities provided, being the subject
matter of the application,
have always been part of, and paid from,
the commercial account of Eldacc (Pty) Ltd (“Eldacc”).
Eldacc took a commercial
loan from the applicant, and part of this
was to provide the facilities mentioned hereinabove. These facilities
were authorised
by the applicant based on the rental agreements
entered into between Eldacc and other Culverwell companies and,
principally, the
rental agreements with Transit Freight Forwarding
(“Transit”) as lessee. 83% of the Culverwell companies’
rental
income derive from Transit. Indirectly payment of the
facilities was dependant on receipt of payments from Transit to
Eldacc. As
a result of the Covid pandemic, Transit ran into financial
difficulties and was unable to pay its rental income. This had a
knock-on
effect which made it impossible for Eldacc to pay the
various facilities mentioned in this application.
[26]
It was argued that this supervening event
rendered performance in terms of the facility agreements impossible
and such event was
not foreseeable according to Mr Culverwell.
[27]
This defence has no merit whatsoever. Quite
correctly, in my view, counsel for Mr Culverwell did not pursue this
defence with any
vigour. It is certainly foreseeable that a tenant
may run into financial difficulty and stop paying rental. This is a
regular occurrence
in business and a foreseeable risk.
[28]
Inability to be able to repay a debt
because of financial constraints does not in this case create a
supervening impossibility,
either partial or temporary. Mr
Culverwell’s defence is based on Eldacc’s subjective
impossibility to perform his obligations
to repay the facilities.
[29]
Objective impossibility is a requirement of
the very stringent provisions of the common law doctrine of
supervening impossibility
of performance.
[30]
In
Unibank
Savings and Loans Ltd (formerly Community Bank) v Absa Bank
Limited,
[1]
this
court held that:
“
Impossibility
is furthermore not implicit in the change of financial strength or in
commercial circumstances which cause compliance
with the contractual
obligations to be difficult, expensive or unaffordable ”
[31]
This is because:
“
Deteriorations
of that nature are foreseeable in the business world at the time when
the contract is concluded.”
[32]
In conducting the business of rentals, it
can hardly be argued by Mr Culverwell that it could not have foreseen
breach by its major
tenant.
[33]
Performance
must be absolutely or objectively impossible. Mere personal
incapacity to perform (or subjective impossibility) does
not render
performance impossible.
[2]
This is what Eldacc experienced, because its tenant defaulted. The
fact that Eldacc does not have money to pay its dues, or that
it may
be uneconomical or unaffordable, does not amount to objective
impossibility.
[34]
In
Scoin
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Bernstein NO,
[3]
the
SCA held that the law “
does
not regard mere personal incapacity to perform as constituting
impossibility”.
[35]
Moreover,
Mr Culverwell cannot rely on this supervening impossibility of
performance because it arose after Eldacc had fallen in
mora
.
[4]
It follows that reliance on the doctrines of initial and supervening
impossibility is misplaced.
[36]
The defence of a temporary impossibility
also holds no water. It cannot be expected of the applicant to accept
a reduced performance
and await full performance which is certainly
not guaranteed. Mr Culverwell failed to inform this court that Eldacc
has been placed
in liquidation and that payment from this entity
would not be forthcoming.
[37]
Further, it cannot be said that this
application was premature as the applicant acted within its
contractual terms to terminate
the facility agreements and to call up
the full outstanding amounts.
[38]
Moreover, an apart from anything else, the
contractual responsibility was on Mr Culverwell, and not Eldacc, to
make payments to
applicant in terms of the facility agreements. He
failed to do so in breach of his obligations.
[39]
This leaves for consideration the defence
that the overdraft facility and credit card agreements terms and
conditions were not signed.
[40]
The court must distinguish between the
facilities made available to Mr Culverwell personally and the credit
card facilities made
available to Mr Mokgoko in terms of which Mr
Culverwell bound himself jointly and severally as surety and
co-principal debtor with
the principal debtor
in
solidum
for the due and punctual
payment of all amounts due on this card.
[41]
The applicant provided Mr Culverwell with a
pre-agreement statement which incorporated a quotation and
loan/overdraft facility agreement.
This document was provided to Mr
Culverwell in terms of section 92 of the NCA.
[42]
It is stipulated in this document as
follows:
“
The
bank hereby provides to the borrower the following Pre-Agreement
Statement and Quotation, which, once it has been accepted by
the
Borrower, will be the agreement between the Bank and the Borrower.”
[43]
The terms are then set out in the written
quotation, including the amounts payable and interest rate
applicable.
[44]
In Part G of this document, there is an
acknowledgement in the following terms:
“
I/We,
the Borrower hereby acknowledges receipt of the aforementioned
Pre-Agreement Statement and Quotation setting out the intermediate
/
large loan and overdraft facility terms and conditions.”
[45]
This acknowledgement is signed by Mr
Culverwell on 9 June 2015.
[46]
Below Mr Culverwell’s signature
appears an acceptance of the quotation wherein Mr Culverwell accepted
the quotation and agreed
to the terms and conditions attached to the
documents. It was further stated that a copy of the terms and
conditions has been handed
to Mr Culverwell. He signed the
acceptance.
[47]
Attached to the overdraft facility
quotation / agreement are the terms and conditions which Mr
Culverwell accepted was provided
to him. The fact that the terms and
conditions were not separately signed by Mr Culverwell do not render
these terms and conditions
not applicable as he signed for its
receipt.
[48]
The same situation presented itself as far
as the credit card agreement is concerned. The Pre-Agreement
Statement and Quotation
was provided which was later signed by Mr
Culverwell which included the terms and conditions.
[49]
The court finds that Mr Culverwell duly
signed the overdraft facility agreement and credit card facility
agreement. These agreements
were fully implemented and Mr Culverwell
made use of the facilities to its full extent
[50]
The only unsigned document is the credit
card agreement granted to Mr Mokgoko. The applicant averred that it
could not find the
original signed agreement and that it was either
misplaced, lost or inadvertently destroyed. The question is whether
the secondary
evidence of the unsigned agreement could be relied upon
for a finding, on a balance of probabilities, that Mr Mokgoko entered
into
this credit card agreement? It is not Mr Mokgoko who is held
liable in terms of this credit card agreement, but Mr Culverwell in
his capacity as surety.
[51]
On 17 December 2015, Mr Culverwell signed
as surety in terms of which he agreed that the applicant provided to
him the attached
Pre-
Agreement Statement and Quotation which the
applicant provided to Mr Mokgoko. Mr Culverwell through his signature
acknowledged receipt
of the Pre-Agreement Statement and Quotation, as
well as the surety agreement. Mr Mokgogo used the credit card to the
maximum of
the credit provided.
[52]
In such circumstances the court is of the
view that it has been proven on a balance of probabilities that a
signed copy of Mr Mokgoko’s
credit card agreement in fact
existed and that the unsigned copy is in similar terms as the signed
copy. This credit card facility
agreement has been proven by the
applicant.
[53]
Mr Culverwell could not raise any valid
defence against the balance certificate issued by the applicant
showing the indebtedness
in relation to the various facilities and,
consequently, the applicant would be entitled to judgment according
to the amounts mentioned
therein.
[54]
No defence was raised why the mortgaged
property should not be declared specially executable. This property
is not the primary residence
of Mr Culverwell and the court is not
going to set a reserve price.
[55]
Accordingly, the applicant will be entitled
to judgment in terms of the notice of motion.
# The matter against Mrs
Culverwell
The matter against Mrs
Culverwell
[56]
In this application, the applicant seeks an
order against Mr and Mrs Culverwell for judgment of a monetary amount
which is due,
owing and payable in respect of credit facilities
bearing account number 1100001999 (current account with overdraft
facility) and
a credit card account number 46447800402742 in the
collective amount of R583,503.46.
[57]
The same immovable property provided
security for this indebtedness. Mr Culverwell stood surety for the
repayment of the facilities
by Mrs Culverwell. The deed of suretyship
was properly signed by Mr Culverwell. The current account with the
facility agreement
and the credit card facility agreement were duly
signed by Mrs Culverwell and she acknowledged receipt of the terms
and conditions.
[58]
Consequently, all agreements relied upon by
the applicant have been duly signed by Mrs Culverwell. She signed
accepting these agreements
and for receipt of the terms and
conditions. Her defence that the terms and conditions documents
should have been separately
signed should fail.
[59]
The other defences raised by Mrs Culverwell
are the same as the defences raised by Mr Culverwell and have no
merit.
[60]
No valid defence was raised against the
certificate of balance issued by the applicant and the amounts
contained therein should
be accepted. Ms Culverwell, and Mr
Culverwell as surety for the indebtedness of Mrs Culverwell, should
be held liable in terms
of the agreements signed.
[61]
The immovable property over which a
mortgage bond was registered should be declared specially executable.
[62]
Consequently, the applicant would be
entitled to an order in this matter in terms of the notice of motion.
The order
[63]
In the two matters before this court, the
court was provided with two draft orders. The court is satisfied that
the orders should
be made according to these orders, which will be
attached to this judgment.
[64]
The court makes the following orders in
relation to the two applications before court:
The draft orders marked
X1 and X2, respectively, in relation to case numbers 2022-059460 and
2022-059522, are hereby made orders
of this court.
R STRYDOM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on:
19 March 2024
Delivered
on:
27 March 2024
Appearances:
For the
Applicant:
Adv. F. Bezuidenhout
Instructed
by:
Jay Mthobi Inc
For the
Respondents:
Adv. J. Hartman
Instructed
by:
Pagel Schulenburg Inc
[1]
2000
(4) SA 191
(W) at para 9.3.1.
[2]
Quinella
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Rural Development
2010
(4) SA 308
(LCC) at paras 27 - 29
[3]
2011
(2) SA 118
(SCA) at para 22
[4]
Tweedi
v Park Travel Agency (Pty) Ltd t/a Park Tours
1998
(4) SA 802
(W)
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