Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 349South Africa
Tebeila N.O and Others v ABSA Bank Ltd (2019/14019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 349 (9 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 April 2024
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 349
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Tebeila N.O and Others v ABSA Bank Ltd (2019/14019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 349 (9 April 2024)
Tebeila N.O and Others v ABSA Bank Ltd (2019/14019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 349 (9 April 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_349.html
sino date 9 April 2024
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2019/14019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
9
APRIL 2024
A.
FRIEDMAN
In
the matter between:
TEBEILA
N.O.,
TIMOTHY
First Applicant
NTWAMPIE
N.O., MORWAMOCHE ANDREW
Second Applicant
MOKOU
N.O., IMOGEN-FAITH
MALIN
Third Applicant
[in
their capacities as trustees for the time being of
The
MOLANGWANE TRUST (IT no 3[...]]
TEBEILA,
TIMOTHY
Fourth Applicant
and
ABSA BANK
LTD
Respondent
In re:
ABSA
BANK
LTD
Applicant
and
TEBEILA
N.O.,
TIMOTHY
First Respondent
NTWAMPIE
N.O., MORWAMOCHE ANDREW
Second Respondent
MOKOU
N.O., IMOGEN-FAITH
MALIN
Third Respondent
[in
their capacities as trustees for the time being of
The
MOLANGWANE TRUST (IT no 3[...]]
TEBEILA,
TIMOTHY
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE
TO APPEAL)
FRIEDMAN AJ
[1]
On 29 November 2022, I handed down judgment in an application brought
by Absa Bank Ltd (“
Absa
”) to enforce payment in
terms of a credit agreement concluded with the applicants for leave
to appeal (who, to retain consistency
with my judgment on the merits,
I shall describe below as “
the respondents
”) and
to declare executable the immovable property which was purchased with
the credit advanced by Absa. In the discussion
below, I shall refer
to my judgment in the original proceedings as “
the merits
judgment
” and all relevant papers and issues relevant to
the original proceedings as “
the merits founding affidavit
”,
the “
merits answering affidavit
”, “
the
merits proceedings
” and so on.
[2]
I do not intend to repeat anything said in the merits judgment here.
This
judgment should be read together with that one and the
discussion below assumes familiarity with the merits judgment.
# APPEARANCE BY THE
RESPONDENTS
APPEARANCE BY THE
RESPONDENTS
[3]
This application for leave to appeal has taken close to 18 months to
be
heard. As far as I can see from previous correspondence, it was
scheduled to be heard in around June or July 2023, but was removed
from the roll.
Ms Acker
, who appeared for Absa (as she did in
the merits proceedings), informed me that Absa has made multiple
efforts to have this application
for leave to appeal heard because
the respondents failed to take the necessary steps to set it down.
[4]
When the matter began at 9h30 on the date reflected in the notice of
set
down (8 April 2024), there was no appearance for the respondents.
The Registrar made efforts to locate them and, in due course,
the
respondents’ attorney,
Mr Raphela
, appeared. He informed
me that, despite the notice of the hearing having been sent to the
same email addresses (two of them) used
by his firm since they came
on record in this matter, nobody at his firm received them. Email
correspondence is now the default
method of communication used by the
Registrars of this Court to communicate with parties. The email
addresses used by the Registrar
to inform the parties of the hearing
date and time are the same addresses provided by Mr Raphela’s
firm in its notice of
appointment dated 21 June 2023. I was informed
both by the Registrar and the legal representatives of Absa that one
or both of
these addresses had previously been successfully used to
communicate with Mr Raphela’s firm. In these circumstances, I
informed
Mr Raphela
that I had no reason to disbelieve him
when he said that he did not receive notice of the hearing, but that
I would have to proceed
on the basis that the hearing date was
properly brought to the respondents’ attention.
[5]
I have to acknowledge, and make no apology for doing so, that I was
influenced
in my desire to bring finality to this matter by my view,
which I shared with
Mr Raphela
, that the application for leave
to appeal, as reflected in the notice filed by the respondents on 15
December 2022, bears no prospects
of success. I should emphasise that
I would not have been willing to proceed with the hearing had I been
in any doubt that the
respondents were given proper notice. However,
since I had no doubt, and since this matter demands finality, I
considered it to
be essential to proceed.
[6]
Mr Raphela
, quite fairly, did not dispute that, given that the
notice had been properly brought to the respondents’ attention
(even
if they say that, as a matter of fact, they did not receive
it), it would be appropriate for me to proceed to determine the
matter.
He placed the relevant facts (relating to the respondents’
claim that they did not receive notice of the hearing) before Court,
but then left it at that. I informed the parties that I intended to
give a brief judgment dealing with each of the grounds on which
the
application for leave to appeal is based as reflected in the notice
of application for leave to appeal. I undertook to explain,
as I
attempt to do below, my reasons for concluding that an appeal would
bear no prospects of success.
Mr Raphela
accepted this, and
undertook to inform his clients of the outcome in due course. I am
grateful to him for making the effort to
join the hearing and for
adopting a sensible approach in the circumstances.
#
# ABSA’S HEADS OF
ARGUMENT
ABSA’S HEADS OF
ARGUMENT
[7]
In the hearing of the application for leave to appeal,
Ms Acker
alerted me to the fact that she had uploaded heads of argument to
Caselines. I confessed that, in my preparation, I had overlooked
them. I have considered them as part of formulating this judgment,
and I am grateful to her for having taken the effort to assist
me by
providing them.
# THE GROUNDS
THE GROUNDS
[8]
The grounds in the application for leave to appeal are the following
(I
summarise robustly, to avoid repetition):
8.1.
I did not apply rules 46 and 46A of this Court’s rules
(relating to execution against
immovable property) correctly,
primarily for failing to set a reserve price (but also, if I
understand correctly, for letting Absa
get away with non-compliance
with these rules).
8.2.
I failed to make a finding in terms of section 83 of the National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
(“
the
National Credit Act
”)
that the credit agreement was reckless credit.
8.3.
I failed to ensure that Absa complied with
section 129(1)
, read with
section 130
, of the
National Credit Act.
8.4.
My
order is “unconstitutional” because “it was
unconstitutional for Absa to apply to attach the Respondent’s
[sic] property and the registrar would be precluded to order
attachment [sic]”.
[9]
I deal with each one briefly below.
# RULES 46 AND 46A
RULES 46 AND 46A
[10]
This proposed ground of appeal links to the argument of the
respondents that my order was
unconstitutional. I deal with that
below. For the reasons given in that section of the judgment, I am
satisfied that the respondents
bear no prospects of success in
overturning my order on any basis related to their constitutional
rights. In this section, I focus
briefly on the arguments advanced by
the respondents about the application of the detailed requirements of
rule 46A.
[11]
It remains something of a mystery as to what aspects of my
application of
rule 46A
in the merits judgment are said by the
respondents to have been wrong. My failure to set a reserve price is
specifically raised
in the application for leave to appeal. But,
beyond that, no specific non-application of the rule is identified.
In the merits
answering affidavit, the respondents alleged that there
was non-compliance with
rule 46A(3)(d)
, which requires personal
service of an application to declare immovable property executable
unless the court orders that service
may be effected in another
matter. Their contention in the merits answering affidavit, as far as
I understand it, was that they
were prejudiced by alleged
non-compliance with the rule. This, apparently, because the merits
application “was only issued
on 16 April 2019” and they
needed more time to obtain valuation reports to deal with the issue
of an appropriate reserve
price. The answering affidavit was filed
about 7 weeks after the merits application was launched. Given the
timeframes provided
in rule 6 of the Uniform Rules, I do not
understand this complaint.
[12]
But, in any event, there is no doubt that the respondents had proper
notice of the proceedings
and exercised their right to oppose the
application. I referred in the merits judgment to the supplementary
affidavit which the
respondents undertook to, but did not, file. They
had more than ample time to do so (their answering affidavit was
filed in June
2019 and I heard argument in the merits application in
November 2022), and to the extent that they seek to link their
failure to
do so to an allegation that there was not personal service
as contemplated rule 46A(3)(d) (which is how the point was framed in
the merits answering affidavit), it is an attempt which must fail. I
accept that, in some circumstances, formalities must be applied
uniformly, regardless of their purpose. But the service requirement
in rule 46A(3)(d) is designed to protect the interests of judgment
debtors to ensure that all necessary steps are taken to bring an
application under rule 46A to their attention. Since judgment
debtors
will often, at least by the time that a rule 46A application is
brought, have fallen on hard times, most (I hypothesise)
rule 46A
applications are determined in unopposed court. That being so, proper
service is essential. It strikes me as opportunistic
for a respondent
in an opposed application to seek to make something of (alleged) lack
of compliance with rule 46A(3)(d) (or other
service and notice
provisions).
[13]
The remaining focus placed by the respondents on compliance with rule
46A gives rise to
the issues which I addressed in the merits
judgment. Flowing from the reasoning in that judgment, I do not
consider the respondents
to have reasonable prospects of success on
appeal in relation to this ground.
[14]
On the issue of a reserve price,
Ms Acker
quite correctly
pointed out, in her heads of argument, that the courts retain a
discretion as to whether to set a reserve price
in terms of rule
46A(8)(e) of the Uniform Rules. The intention in setting a reserve
price is to prevent the debtor from being prejudiced
by a sale for
substantially less than the true value of the property, leaving the
debtor with no home and a significant debt still
to repay. In this
case, Absa placed detailed information as to the property’s
value before Court in its founding affidavit.
Although the
respondents intimated that its value was higher than reflected in
Absa’s valuations, they failed to take the
opportunity to place
any facts relevant to this issue before Court. This despite expressly
reserving the right to do so in the
merits answering affidavit.
Importantly, Absa understandably did not press for the setting of a
reserve price, and the respondents
did not raise the issue in their
merits argument at all. In these circumstances, I do not consider
there to be a reasonable prospect
of an appeal court setting aside my
merits order on the basis that I failed to provide for a reserve
price.
# RECKLESS CREDIT
RECKLESS CREDIT
[15]
The simple reason why this ground cannot succeed is that the
respondents did not plead,
in their merits answering affidavit, that
the credit agreement constituted reckless credit as contemplated by
sections 80
to
83
of the
National Credit Act. In
my view this is
dispositive of the argument. This is because there are vital facts
which the Court needs to know to determine whether
sections 80
to
83
apply. A striking example is whether an assessment was done in terms
of
section 81(2)
, and, if so, whether Absa satisfied itself that the
respondents understood the agreement. Other factual matters flow from
sections 80(1)
and
80
(2) of the
National Credit Act. Had
the
respondents pleaded reliance on these provisions, Absa would have had
an opportunity to place facts before this Court to refute
(if
possible) the respondents’ reliance on
section 83.
Not only was
this issue not pleaded, it was not argued during the merits
proceedings. It escapes me how it can be raised for the
first time in
the application for leave to appeal, untethered from any factual
jetty. There is simply no evidence in the record
on which an appeal
court could overturn my order on the basis that the credit agreement
is impeachable under
sections 80
to
83
of the
National Credit Act.
# SECTIONS 129 AND 130
SECTIONS 129 AND 130
[16]
In the merits founding affidavit, Absa pleaded that it had complied
with the requirements
of
sections 129(1)
and
130
of the
National
Credit Act by
giving proper notice of the application to the
respondents. In the respondents’ answering affidavit (ie, on
the merits),
they denied that Absa had complied with
section 129
of
the
National Credit Act.
[17
]
In Absa’s replying affidavit, Absa argued that the
National
Credit Act did
not apply to the credit agreement. However,
essentially as an alternative argument, it comprehensively
demonstrated that it had
complied with
sections 129(1)
and
130
of the
National Credit Act before launching the merits proceedings. I do not
wish to make this judgment any longer than necessary
by summarising
Absa’s detailed explanation of its compliance (which included
annexing proof). I shall simply note that I
could have been left in
no doubt that there was compliance.
[18]
I say “could have been” because, in their merits heads of
argument and in the
proceedings before me on the merits, the
respondents did not press the section 129 argument at all. It may
well have been that,
having seen Absa’s response in its
replying affidavit, it was decided by their counsel not to press the
point. I need not
speculate. The simple position is that there is no
reasonable prospect that an appellate court will uphold the section
129 argument.
# UNCONSTITUTIONAL ORDER
UNCONSTITUTIONAL ORDER
[19]
Since this is a leave to appeal judgment, of interest only to the
parties (at best), I
do not intend to spend much time explaining why
this last ground has no merit. There are scores of judgments of our
courts dealing
with the interaction between rule 46A of the Uniform
Rules and the right to housing in section 26 of the Constitution. I
can do
no better than to repeat the recent explanation given by
Moultrie AJ, in
Nedbank Ltd v Mabaso
2023 (2) SA 298
(GJ) at
para 11, that the purpose of rule 46A is to “achieve an
appropriate balance between the legitimate commercial rights
of
judgment creditors to payment and the equally legitimate rights of
indigent debtors to housing under s 26 of the Constitution”.
And I agree (with respect) wholeheartedly with his point, made in the
same paragraph of the judgment, that if the application of
rule 46A
“presents a court with an opportunity to address an
inappropriate imbalance that has emerged between the competing
rights
of the parties, that opportunity must be seized”.
[20]
I do not want to repeat what I said in the merits judgment on the
application of rule 46A
and the substantive question of whether it
would be appropriate to order execution on the facts of the case. In
my view (and it
is always invidious to cast judgement on one’s
own reasoning), the merits judgment reflects an appropriate balancing
of the
various interests, taking into account, in particular, what
was pleaded. I made the point in the merits judgment that I expressly
did not make a finding that section 46A did not apply at all –
ie, I did not make a finding that there was some sort of threshold
(relating to the value of a debtor’s home), above which the
protection fell away. Everything turned, rather, on the balancing
of
the interests envisaged by the rule. There can be no scope for
finding that my order is “unconstitutional”. There
is
also no scope for the direct application of section 26 of the
Constitution (or section 25, for that matter – which I mention
because the respondents refer to it in their application for leave to
appeal). Rather, rule 46A is meant to give effect to the
Constitution
by ensuring that the right in section 26 is adequately protected. The
wrong application of the rule by a judge is
not “unconstitutional”.
It is simply wrong and, accordingly, appealable. In this case,
though, I am satisfied that
there is no prospect of an appeal court
finding that I misapplied rule 46A.
#
# CONCLUSION AND COSTS
CONCLUSION AND COSTS
[21]
It follows from what I have said above that the application for leave
to appeal should
be dismissed.
[22]
For the same reason as given in paragraph 16 of the merits judgment,
Absa is entitled to
costs, in the application for leave to appeal, on
the attorney-client scale.
[23]
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The application for leave to appeal under the above-mentioned case
number is dismissed.
2.
The applicants for leave to appeal (respondents in the main
proceedings)
are to pay the costs of the application for leave to
appeal on the attorney-client scale.
A.
FRIEDMAN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected above 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. The
date for hand down is
deemed to be
9 April 2024
.
Heard:
8
April 2024
Judgment:
9 April 2024
Appearances
:
For Applicants
for leave to appeal:
Mr NI Raphela
(attorney)
Attorneys for
the Applicant:
Raphela Attorneys
Inc
For Respondent:
Ms L Acker
Attorneys for
Respondent:
Bowman Gilfillan
Inc
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Sebeela v Monroe Flowers and Vermaak INC and Others (26857/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 526 (3 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 526High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Theledi v Fistrand Bank Limited (2017/1594) [2024] ZAGPJHC 275 (15 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 275High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Letlalo and Others v Malapile and Another (33916/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 593 (30 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 593High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Telesa Comms (Pty) Ltd v Mia Telecomms (Pty) Ltd (2024/126051) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1033; [2025] 4 All SA 764 (GJ) (3 July 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1033High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Sitimela v Mphara and Another (21719-2010) [2024] ZAGPJHC 240 (29 February 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 240High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar