Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 415South Africa
Firstrand Bank Limited v Mokoena and Others (35888/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 415 (26 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 April 2024
Judgment
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## Firstrand Bank Limited v Mokoena and Others (35888/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 415 (26 April 2024)
Firstrand Bank Limited v Mokoena and Others (35888/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 415 (26 April 2024)
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sino date 26 April 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE: NO.
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
3.
REVISED: NO.
26
April 2024
CASE
NO.: 35888/2022
In
the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
TREVOR
THABANG
MOKOENA
First
respondent
RONALD
MNDENI NDEBELE
Second respondent
NONTLANTLA
PORTIA NDEBELE
Third
respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives via e-mail, by being uploaded
to CaseLines and by
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10:00 on26 April 2024.
JUDGMENT
MEIRING, AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Under two suretyships, the applicant
FirstRand Bank Limited seeks an order directing the first and second
respondents to pay to
it two amounts, namely R5,785,407.49 plus
interest, and R181,775.92 plus interest.
[2]
The first respondent opposes the
application. The second respondent does not oppose it. Nor does the
third respondent, who is cited
only because she is married to the
second respondent in community of property.
[3]
The first respondent advances three
defences. The first is the dilatory special plea of
lis
alibi pendens
. In his heads of
argument, the first respondent casts this special plea in a second
guise, too, namely that the applicant’s
claim breaches the
prohibition of double jeopardy.
[4]
On the merits, the first respondent raises
two defences. First, he says that the applicant cannot rely upon the
suretyship that
he signed without first having exhausted the remedial
plan provided for in the loan agreement to which the suretyship is
accessory.
Second, he says that the applicant failed or refused to
reissue to SmartPurse Solutions (Pty) Ltd, the principal debtor (to
which
I refer below as SmartPurse), a third-party payment processor
(TPPP) certificate for the year starting 1 March 2022, which refusal,
he says, means that the applicant approaches this court with unclean
hands.
[5]
I deal first with two other preliminary
points, before considering this range of defences.
SERVICE
[6]
Neither the second, nor the third
respondent has taken any steps in this application.
[7]
On 27 October 2023, the applicant delivered
a service affidavit to which a candidate legal practitioner in the
employ of its
attorneys of record had deposed the previous day.
The object of that affidavit, the candidate says, is to “
demonstrate
… the applicant effected proper service of the application
issued against the respondents in accordance with
the Uniform Rules
of Court
”.
[8]
The candidate goes on to describe the
service upon the second and third respondents. In error, he says that
on 24 October 2023 it
had been effected upon them. However, the
sheriff’s enclosed returns of service indicate that service had
indeed been effected
upon both the second and third respondents
through service upon the third respondent at the address 41 Integra
Drive, Breaunanda,
in Krugersdorp, just after 11:00 on 24 October
2022, four days after the application had been issued. It seems clear
that the use
by the candidate legal practitioner of the year 2023 is
a clerical error in his description of the applicable service.
(Indeed,
he makes the same clerical mistake in respect of service on
the first respondent.) The Krugersdorp address stated above, which
the sheriff describes as the
domicilium
citandi et executandi
of the second and
third respondents, is indeed the address that they inscribed in
manuscript at the foot of the second respondent’s
suretyship
agreement.
CONDONATION
[9]
This application was brought on 20 October
2022. The answering affidavit was due within fifteen days after the
respondents had given
notice of their intention to oppose. The
answering affidavit of the first respondent was delivered only on 10
February 2023.
[10]
The first respondent seeks condonation for
the late delivery of his answering affidavit. He explains that, under
rule 35, he had
sought a clearer copy of the loan agreement. In
December 2022, Mr Ndobe, representing him, had also experienced
difficulties accessing
his e-mail messages because of damage wrought
to his laptop computer. The first respondent avers that the lateness
of the delivery
of the answering affidavit has caused no prejudice.
The applicant does not oppose the condonation sought.
[11]
In
my view, in these circumstances, good cause has been demonstrated for
condonation. It is in the interests of justice that condonation
be
granted.
[1]
Accordingly, the
late delivery of the answering affidavit is condoned.
FACTS
The loan agreement and
the suretyships of 12 April 2017
[12]
On 12 April 2017, in Sandton, the applicant
and SmartPurse concluded a written loan agreement, comprised of a
loan schedule and
appendix 1, namely the applicant’s standard
terms and conditions.
[13]
Under that agreement, the applicant would
advance R9m to SmartPurse, so that it might acquire Portion 12 of Erf
1[...] S[...], Extension
7[...], in Gauteng.
Over
84 months, SmartPurse would repay the loan, including interest, in
monthly instalments of R154,101.93. SmartPurse would register
a first
covering bond of R9m over the property.
[14]
The first and second respondents were both
directors of SmartPurse. When the applicant’s Ms Ndimande
deposed to the founding
affidavit, Mr Mokoena was the sole director
of SmartPurse. Mr Ndebele had formerly been a director, but by then
he was no longer
one.
[15]
Also on 12 April 2017, the first and second
respondents executed two separate suretyship agreements in favour of
the applicant.
Under them, Messrs Mokoena and Ndebele bound
themselves irrevocably and unconditionally as surety and co-principal
debtor, jointly
and severally
in solidum
with SmartPurse, for the latter’s due and punctual payment of
all monies that it might then have owed or would from time
to time
come to owe to the applicant. The first respondent’s liability
under the suretyship that he concluded was capped
at R9m; that of the
second respondent, at R7m. They both renounced the benefit of
excussion.
Further terms of the
loan agreement
[16]
Under the loan
agreement,
an
event of default included SmartPurse’s failure to pay an amount
due under the loan agreement
;
its
failure
punctually to pay municipal fees, charges, rates or taxes (and the
like) for the property (and not remedying such breaches
within seven
days of notice having been given); and its failure, during the term
of the loan agreement, to record a trading profit
in one or more
years of trading (unless the applicant in writing condoned it).
[17]
Were SmartPurse
to commit an event of
default, the applicant would be entitled to accelerate or demand
payment of all the amounts owing, to call
up or execute any security
document, and to charge interest on the outstanding loan.
Implementation of the
loan agreement and the difficulties that arose
[18]
The
applicant
advanced to
SmartPurse the loan amount of R9m. Some years into the term of the
loan agreement, SmartPurse ran into difficulties.
[19]
On 19 October 2021,
the applicant wrote to SmartPurse, referring to clause 9.3.5 in
appendix 1, which obliges the respondent to
“
provide
FNB with such other material information in relation to the
Borrower’s financial affairs as FNB may from time to time
reasonably require on 5 Business Days notice to the Borrower
”.
It added that SmartPurse’s failure to provide “
the
necessary information
”
was an event of default under clause 14.2.12 in appendix 1.
[20]
In error, that letter
suggests that by then SmartPurse was in that regard already in
default (“
Should the above
default not be remedied within 5 (five) days or in the event of any
further defaults or breaches …
”
).
Be that as it may, in the applicant’s own
words in the founding affidavit, SmartPurse was thus “
given
until 26 October 2021 to furnish the Bank with the documents as
requested
” (yet the letter does
not specify that date). The applicant also observed: “
The
Company [
sc.
SmartPurse]
provided the Bank with the financial information on 21 October 2021.
”
Logically, therefore, by responding timeously SmartPurse was not in
default as far as clause 9.3.5 was concerned.
[21]
Some months later,
difficulties arose again.
On
17
March 2022, the applicant sent another letter to SmartPurse. In the
founding affidavit, that letter is called “
a
further breach letter
”.
Yet, as I read it, this was the first breach letter under the loan
agreement. It included this passage:
“
3.
The current outstanding balance in terms of the loan … is
R6,298,775.87 plus interest and fees.
4.
In terms of clause 3.4 of the Loan Agreement you have committed to
repay the loan plus interest thereon within the repayment
period of
84 months by way of equal monthly instalments.
5.
As per our records you are currently in arrears on the loan
repayments for an amount of R46,116.27 which amounts to an
event of
default in terms of clause 14.2.2 of Appendix 1 of the Loan
Agreement.
6.
In terms of clause 9.3.10 of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement, the
Borrower undertook to pay all rates and taxes in respect
of the
property, the Bank hereby requests a copy of the latest rates and
taxes municipal statement reflecting evidence thereof,
failure to
provide this statement will amount to an event of default in terms of
14.2.6 of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement.
7.
In terms of clause 13.1 of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement you have
undertaken to insure the Property to the Bank for
the entire period
from disbursement date to termination date of the loan and as per our
records the debit order for the insurance
was returned unpaid. We
require confirmation that the premiums for the insurance policy are
up to date and Failure to provide confirmation
that insurance policy
has been renewed, will amount to an Event of Default in terms of
clause 14.2.20 of Appendix 1 of the Loan
Agreement.
8.
In terms of clause 14.1.17 of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement an
Event of default shall occur if the Borrower has fails
to record a
trading profit for one or more years. The financial information
received on 21 October 2021 reflect losses for the
financial year of
2020 and 2021.
9.
Should all the above defaults not be remedied within 14 (fourteen)
days or in the event of any further defaults on your
loan repayments
or breaches on the Loan Agreement, the Bank, in terms of clause 15.3
of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement, will
have the right without
further notice to the Borrower, to:
9.1
Claim full repayment of the outstanding Loan Balance;
9.2
Charge interest on the outstanding Loan Balance at the default
Penalty Rate of 5% from the date of default until the
date on which
the default is rectified; and
9.3
Levy execution against the mortgaged property.
”
[22]
In response to that
letter, on 7 April 2022 SmartPurse wrote to the applicant,
inter
alia
as
follows:
“
This
letter serves to respond to the requests made as follows:
1. The required
Financial Statements for the annual review were submitted on the 21
st
October 2021.
2. Our
outstanding balance on the rates and taxes is R489,872.43. We have
approached the City of Johannesburg in order to
make a payment
arrangement on the arrears and they agreed, with the following terms:
·
R100,000.00 immediately
·
R21,659.58 over 18 months
3. Our insurance
is in place. We attach with this letter correspondence from our
insurer in this regard.
4. It is common
course that globally there has been no business taking place as a
result of the Covid-19 pandemic. SmartPurse
Solutions (Pty) Ltd has
not been spared of this …
As such, I make the
following request:
1. R500,000.00
of our excess funds be withdrawn immediately in order to get our
business operations back in order.
2. The remaining
balance of approximately R6,700,000.00 be capitalized over 72 months,
with equal monthly instalments.
3. Assistance
with obtaining our TPPP Certificate in order for us to resume our
operations.
We have, as from the
1
st
April 2022, a total of R153,000.00 worth of rental
income, which will be able to cover both the CPF facility as well as
all other
expenses relating to the building. In essence more than 75%
of our rental income, which will be coming from third party tenants,
will cover the CPF whilst we also resume our normal business
operations.…
We
are confident that the combination of the resumption of our core
business, that of being a Third Party Payment Provider, as well
as
the projected (including actual) rental income, we will be able to
service this facility accordingly.
”
[23]
This is an
admission on the part of SmartPurse that it had fallen into breach of
the loan agreement. Indeed, on 20 June 2022 the
applicant dispatched
yet another letter of demand, which, in relevant part, reads:
“
4.
The current outstanding balance in terms of the loan referred to in
1. above is R6,357,195.96 plus interest and fees.
5.
The defaults as described in our letter dated 17 March 2022 have not
been remedied within 14 days.
6.
We also refer to your request contained in the letter dated 7 April
2022.
7.
The availability of prepaid funds is subject to clause 4.5 of
Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement. It is evident that there
are events
of default which have not been remedied. These have been highlighted
in the paragraphs below.
8.
In terms of request 2 and 3 in your letter, the account is not in
good standing due to the events of defaults that have
not been
remedied.
9.
In terms of clause 9.3.10 of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement, the
Borrower undertook to pay all rates and taxes in respect
of the
property. The rates and taxes are currently in arrears, this amounts
to an event of default in terms of clause 14.2.6.
10.
In terms of clause 14.1.17 of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement and
Event of Default shall occur if the Borrower fails
to record a
trading profit for one or more years. The financial information
received on 21 October 2021 reflect losses for the
financial year of
2020 and 2021 which amounts to an event of default.
11.
In terms of clause 9.3.6 of Appendix 1 of the Loan Agreement, the
Borrower if it becomes aware of the occurrence of any
fact/circumstances which may result in a Material Adverse Effect or
in the occurrence Event of Default or Potential Event of Default,
forthwith in writing advise the Bank. In terms of the account
statistics, and information available, the company has not been able
to generate revenue for the past 24 months. This amounts to an event
of default, in terms of clause 14.2.32.
12.
In the circumstances and in terms of clause 15.3 of Appendix 1 of the
Loan Agreement, the Bank hereby call upon you to
immediately repay
the total outstanding balance in the amount of R6,357,195.96 plus
interest and fees (from date hereof to date
of payment, both days
inclusive). Failing which we shall have no alternative but to take
action as deemed fit to protect our interests.
This may include
handing the matter over to our attorneys for collection and
realisation of all securities and credit balances
held. The costs
incurred in this process will be for your account and any amounts
then received will also be utilised to cover
these costs.
”
[24]
In
response
to that letter, on 12
August 2022 SmartPurse wrote to the applicant reiterating the
substance of its settlement proposal of 7 April
2022.
The applicant
rejected it.
[25]
On 19 August
2022, its attorneys directed to SmartPurse a demand under section
345(1)(a) of the Companies Act, 1973. In it, the
applicant listed
various events of default on SmartPurse’s part. The letter
ended thus: “
Accordingly
we are instructed to demand, as we hereby do, repayment by Smartpurse
to FNB of the indebtedness owing by Smartpurse
to FNB.
”
SmartPurse did not accede to the statutory demand.
[26]
This led to an
application for the liquidation of SmartPurse, of which I have also
been seized.
[27]
On 19 August
2022, the applicant’s attorneys wrote separate letters to the
first and second respondents, with each enclosing
the letter of
demand to SmartPurse of 3 August 2022 and in each seeking the payment
of the two amounts now being sought in this
application.
[28]
As I say
above, in opposition to the payment orders that the applicant seeks,
the first respondent raises three defences.
I deal with them in
turn.
PRELIMINARY DEFENCES
Lis alibi pendens
[29]
First, the first respondent raises the
special plea of
lis alibi pendens
.
[30]
In the answering affidavit, he says that,
since this court is currently also seized of the applicant’s
application for the
liquidation of SmartPurse, this application
enforcing obligations under the suretyship is premature: “
[T]his
application cannot be heard until a determination is made … in
respect of a liquidation application launched by the
Applicant
against the Principal Debtor, Smartpurse Solutions (Pty) Ltd …
in respect of the same cause of action, claim and
involving the same
parties.
” The first respondent’s
position is thus that this application ought to be stayed pending the
final determination of
the winding-up application.
[31]
The judgment in the winding-up application
will be issued at roughly the same time as this judgment. Yet were
this special plea
to be upheld, the adjudication of this application
might be suspended until the final determination of the liquidation
application,
including appeals against whatever order is granted in
it. Accordingly, it remains necessary for me to consider this special
plea.
[32]
The
special plea of
lis
alibi pendens
is “
based
on the proposition that the dispute (lis) between the parties is
being litigated elsewhere and therefore it is inappropriate
for it to
be litigated in the court in which the plea is raised
”.
What is more: “
The
policy underpinning it is that there should be a limit to the extent
to which the same issue is litigated between the same parties
and
that it is desirable that there be finality in litigation. The courts
are also concerned to avoid a situation where different
courts
pronounce on the same issue with the risk that they may reach
differing conclusions.
”
[2]
[33]
In her submissions for the applicant, Ms
Mashishi relied upon Voet. Indeed, this special plea has its origins
in the plea (or
exceptio
,
as the Romans called it) of
res
judicata
. In book 44.2 of the Digest,
which
book is entitled “
De
Exceptione Rei Iudicatae”, Justinian deals with that
exceptio
.
In Johannes Voet’s
Commentarius ad Pandectas
,
a commentary on the Digest, in his observations on 44.2.7, that
unarguably learned author draws an analogy (in Percival Gane’s
English) from the
exceptio rei iudicatae
to the
exceptio lis pendens
:
“
Exception
of
lis pendens
also
requires same persons, thing and cause. The exception that a suit is
already pending is quite akin to the exception of
res
judicata
, inasmuch as, when a suit is
pending before another judge, this exception is granted just so often
as, and in all those cases in
which after a suit has been ended there
is room for the exception of
res
judicata
in terms of what has
already been said. Thus the suit must already have started to be
mooted before another judge between the same
persons, about the same
matter and on the same cause, since the place where a judicial
proceeding has once been taken up is also
the place where it ought to
be given its ending
.”
[34]
In
Association
of Mine Workers and Construction Union v Ngululu Bulk Carriers (Pty)
Limited
,
[3]
the Constitutional Court said this:
[4]
“
The
purpose of
lis
pendens
is
to prevent duplication of legal proceedings. As its requirements
illustrate, once a claim is pending in a competent court, a
litigant
is not allowed to initiate the same claim in different proceedings.
For a
lis
pendens
defence
to succeed, the defendant must show that there is a pending
litigation between the same parties, based on the same cause
of
action and in respect of the same subject matter
.”
[35]
Accordingly,
for the special plea of
lis
pendens
to have purchase, three factors must be present.
[5]
There must be pending litigation between the same parties. The
litigation must be based on the same cause of action. It must be
in
respect of the same subject-matter.
[36]
Yet,
the Supreme Court of Appeal has held that those requirements “
must
not be understood in a literal sense and as immutable rules
”.
[6]
There is scope for their relaxation.
[7]
Also, even if the requirements are all made out, a court retains a
discretion whether to stay the subsequent proceedings in which
the
plea is raised, to allow the earlier matter first to be determined to
finality.
[8]
[37]
While the liquidation application and this
application were both triggered by the breach on the part of
SmartPurse of the loan agreement,
the former seeks the winding up of
the principal debtor, a company. On the other hand, this application
is one for a payment order
against two natural persons who stood
surety for SmartPurse.
[38]
In
the answering affidavit and in his heads of argument, the first
respondent relies upon the judgment in this Division in
Man
Truck & Bus (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Dusbus Leasing CC & others
,
[9]
in which Rabie AJ presented an erudite exposition of the special plea
of
res
judicata
or issue estoppel. In his heads of argument, the first respondent
quoted a paragraph (without providing its number) allegedly from
that
judgment, which reads:
[10]
“
[T]he
requirements of ‘same persons’ did not mean only the
identical individuals who were parties to the earlier proceedings,
but included persons who, in law, were identified with the parties to
the proceedings. Whether someone had to be regarded as a
so-called
privy, or as being identified with the parties, depended upon the
facts of each particular case.
”
[39]
This exact passage has appeared as a
quotation in other unreported judgments available on SAFLII. Yet, it
does not appear in the
report of
Man
Truck
. It seems to be a portmanteau of
three things: a sentence in paragraph 33 of that judgment; a citation
in turn embedded in that
same paragraph from
The
Law of South Africa
; and, a sentence
from paragraph 34. Be that as it may, the gist of the point is
summarised in paragraph 38 of
Man Truck
:
“
The
aforementioned examples given by
Voet
of
persons who are identified with one another for the purpose of the
exceptio
rei iudicatae
do
not form a
numerus
clausus
.
[11]
The
concept of a close corporation as a commercial vehicle with very
unique features, requires, in my view, that the principles
governing
the
exceptio
rei iudicatae
should,
when so required by the particular circumstances of each case, be
applied to the member or members of such a close corporation.
”
[40]
In the liquidation application and in this
application, there is a marked difference between the parties, the
subject-matter, and
the cause of action (and, therefore, the relief)
that the applicant seeks.
[41]
In
Collett
v Priest
,
[12]
De Villiers CJ held:
[13]
“
The
order placing a person’s estate under sequestration cannot
fittingly be described as an order for a debt due by the debtor
to
the creditor. Sequestration proceedings are instituted by a creditor
against a debtor not for the purpose of claiming something
from the
latter, but for the purpose of setting the machinery of the law in
motion to have the debtor declared insolvent. No order
in the nature
of a declaration of rights or of giving or doing something is given
against the debtor. The order sequestrating his
estate affects the
civil status of the debtor and results in vesting his estate in the
Master. No doubt, before an order so serious
in its consequences to
the debtor is given the Court satisfies itself as to the correctness
of the allegations in the petition.
It may for example have to
determine whether the debtor owes the money as alleged in the
petition. But while the Court has to determine
whether the
allegations are correct, there is no claim by the creditor against
the debtor to pay him what is due nor is the Court
asked to give any
judgment, decree or order against the debtor upon any such claim.
”
[42]
In
Prudential
Shippers SA Ltd v Tempest Clothing Co (Pty) Ltd
,
[14]
this division (
per
McEwan J) applied
Collet
,
holding that an application for the winding-up of a debtor’s
estate did not constitute proceedings “
for
the recovery of a debt
”.
In
Electrolux
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Rentek Consulting (Pty) Ltd
,
[15]
the Western Cape division also applied
Collett
:
[16]
“
Collett
v Priest
in fact supports the view that
the legal proceedings for sequestrating a person’s estate is
fundamentally and materially different
from proceedings instituted
for the payment of a debt due by a debtor to a creditor.
”
[43]
In
Electrolux
,
the court went on to hold:
[17]
“
[T]he
cause of action for the recovery of a liquidated debt from the
respondent is different from the set of facts which give rise
to an
enforceable claim for the liquidation of the respondent.
”
[44]
Accordingly, the plea of
lis
alibi pendens
cannot be sustained.
There is no question of relaxation or the like. The special plea is
simply not cognisable.
Double jeopardy
[45]
In
the same breath, the first respondent seeks to rely upon the doctrine
of double jeopardy. While he asserts that it “
applies
equally to civil claims
”,
[18]
he
cites no authority for this proposition. Rather, he suggests that, in
so far as the doctrine is “
a
general rule of the common law
”,
the courts ought to develop the common law by extending the rule to
apply “
equally
to civil claims
”.
[46]
The doctrine of double jeopardy is a
cornerstone of the law of criminal procedure. It encompasses the
pleas available to an accused
person of
autrefois
convict
(the accused was previously
convicted of the same offence) and
autrefois
acquit
(the accused was previously
acquitted of the same offence).
Those
defences are framed in
sections 106(1)(c)
and (d) of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, 1977
.
[47]
In
R
v Manasewitz
,
[19]
the
former Appellate Division (
per
Wessels CJ) described the legal nature of those pleas as being
“
equivalent
to a plea of
exceptio
rei iudicatae
in
our law
”.
[20]
[48]
More
recently, in
Molaudzi
v S
,
[21]
the Constitutional Court (
per
Theron AJ, as she then was) explained how in the nomenclature of
res
judicata
double jeopardy is applied in the criminal context:
[22]
“
However,
the general principle of
res judicata
in the criminal context
is that once an application for leave to appeal is dismissed, this is
a judicial decision, which is final
and determinative. It is somewhat
different from civil cases where a defendant may raise a plea of
res
judicata
only where the same litigant seeks the same relief on the
same cause of action. Thus it appears that in the criminal context,
the
‘cause of action’ is more aptly regarded as the
conviction or sentence as a whole
.”
[49]
What the above
dicta
demonstrate is that there is no need for the courts to develop the
common law as contended for by the first respondent. In the
civil
context, the doctrine of double jeopardy already finds expression in
the special plea of
res judicata
.
The extension for which the first respondent asks would add nothing
to our law.
THE DEFENCES ON THE
MERITS
[50]
Before addressing the two defences on the
merits, I set out the basic tenets of the law of suretyship.
The law of suretyship
[51]
A
contract of suretyship is one under which one person, the surety,
binds themselves as debtor to the creditor of another person,
the
principal debtor, to perform the whole or part of the performance due
to the creditor by the principal debtor.
[23]
[52]
Accordingly,
a surety’s liability hinges upon the existence of a principal
debt. It is an accessory obligation.
[24]
A
surety’s obligation does not novate the principal debt. It
serves simply to secure it.
[25]
[53]
Unless the parties have agreed otherwise, a
surety’s debt normally becomes enforceable as soon as the
principal debtor is
in default. However, unless contractually
excluded, that liability is subject to the surety’s right that
the principal debtor
first be excussed (literally: shaked down).
[54]
Yet,
if sureties bind themselves as surety and co-principal debtor, their
liability arises and becomes enforceable at the same time
as that of
the principal debtor. A natural effect of being a co-principal debtor
is that the surety renounces the benefits ordinarily
available to
them, like the benefit of excussion.
[26]
[55]
I turn, then, to consider the two defences
on the merits.
The
applicant ought to have exhausted the domestic remedy in clause
14.2.7.1
[56]
The first respondent’s first defence
on the merits also has a dilatory character. He contends that this
application is premature
since the parties have not followed the
provision on a remedial plan in clause 14.2.7.1 in appendix 1 to the
loan agreement.
[57]
To illustrate the context of clause
14.2.7.1, I quote the first part of clause 14, up to and including
clause 14.7.2.2:
“
14.
EVENTS OF DEFAULT
14.1 An Event
of Default shall occur if any of the following events, each of which
shall be severable and distinct from the
others, occurs (whether or
not caused by any reason whatsoever outside the control of the
Borrower or any other person).
14.2 The Events
of Default occur if the Borrower and/or Security Providers, as the
case may be:
14.2.1 fails,
for any reason whatsoever, to draw down the Loan within 6 months of
the date of the conditions as set out in
the Agreement being
fulfilled or waived; or
14.2.2 fails to
pay any amount due in terms of the Agreement; or
14.2.3 fails to
repay the VAT Loan Outstandings, within the time period as
contemplated in the Agreement, if applicable;
or
14.2.4 fails to
provide all information and/or documents and/or to sign all such
documents as may be required by FNB for
the purposes of providing
additional security and/or to pay the costs of providing such
security on request; or
14.2.5 fails to
comply with its obligations in regard to the lease agreements
concluded in respect of the Property (or any
part thereof), as
envisaged in the Disbursement Conditions, if applicable; or
14.2.6 fails to
pay punctually municipal service fees and consumption charges,
property rates and other municipal taxes,
levies and duties and
interest or surcharges on these amounts in respect of the Property
and not remedying such breach within 7
days of notice having been
given to it to do so; or
14.2.7
fails
to comply with or maintain any of the Financial Covenants
contemplated in the Loan Schedule, provided that
–
14.2.7.1
subject to clause 14.2.7.2 (Remedial Plan) below,
the Borrower
shall have 30 days from the date of any written notice given by FNB
to the Borrower notifying the Borrower of such
breach, to either
remedy the breach in respect of that Financial Covenant or to provide
FNB with a written remedial plan detailing
how it will remedy the
financial covenant
the terms and conditions of which (including
but not limited to timing) shall be to the sole satisfaction of FNB
(the ‘
Remedial Plan
’) if –
14.2.7.1.1 the
Borrower fails to remedy the breach within the 30 day period; or
14.2.7.1.2 the
Borrower fails to provide a Remedial Plan to the satisfaction of FNB
within the 30 day period; or
14.2.7.1.3 FNB
approves the Remedial Plan but the Borrower fails to comply with any
of the provisions of the approved Remedial
Plan,
FNB shall be entitled
to exercise its remedies as contemplated in clause 14.3 (Remedies)
below immediately without further notice
to the Borrower;
14.2.7.2 if the
Borrower breaches any Financial Covenant on more than 3 occasions
during the Term, the provisions of clause
14.2.7 (Remedial Plan)
above shall cease to apply and FNB shall be entitled to exercise its
remedies contemplated in clause 14.3
(Remedies) below immediately
without notice to the Borrower
…”
[emphasis added]
[58]
The notion of financial covenants, which is
central to clause 14.2.7.1, is defined in appendix 1 as “
the
conditions envisaged in the
Financial
Covenants
clause of the Loan Schedule
”.
Clause 10, albeit headed only “
COVENANTS
”,
contains five conditions that are obviously financial covenants as
that term is commonly used.
[59]
It reads:
“
10.
COVENANTS
10.1 The Loan
as a ratio to the value of the mortgaged Property may not exceed the
LTV for the Term of the Loan, and FNB
may reduce the Loan
accordingly.
10.2 The
mortgaged Property must at FNB’s request and at the Borrower’s
cost be re-valued (1) by way of informal
desktop valuation upon every
anniversary of the Disbursement Date, and (2) formally by FNB’s
valuations department every
3
rd
year after the
Disbursement Date to determine the LTV.
10.3 If the LTV
is exceeded, the Borrower shall, within 20 Business Days of receipt
of a notice from FNB to this effect offer
additional properties to
FNB as security, which properties must be acceptable to FNB.
10.4 Following
acceptance, FNB shall immediately procure that a Bond be registered
over such properties at the Borrower’s
cost.
10.5 Should the
Borrower fail to offer additional satisfactory properties to FNB as
security within the aforementioned time
limit, the Borrower shall be
obliged to immediately repay to FNB such amount as is necessary to
reduce the ratio to LTV stipulated
in the Loan Schedule.
10.6 Any
failure by the Borrower to comply with a demand or requirement in
terms of this clause will constitute an Event
of Default.
”
[60]
Accordingly, the applicant’s
submission is sound, namely that the breaches of which it complains
do not fall within the purview
of the financial covenants in clause
10, nor indeed are they financial covenants properly and commonly so
called. Indeed, if one
understands what a financial covenant is, the
remedy fashioned in clauses 14.2.7.1 and 14.2.7.2 in appendix 1 makes
considerable
sense.
[61]
The first respondent’s reliance on
this defence is unsound. Clause 14.2.7.2 does not apply here.
Unclean
hands and the TPPP certificate
[62]
The first respondent’s second defence
on the merits is that the applicant approaches this court with
unclean hands. Thus,
the first respondent says that the applicant
cannot permissibly benefit from its own wrongdoing.
[63]
The basis for this contention is that the
applicant failed or refused to issue to SmartPurse a TPPP certificate
for the year starting
1 March 2022, without which SmartPurse cannot
render any services. He characterises this conduct on the applicant’s
part
as “
self-help
”.
[64]
In the answering affidavit, the first
respondent goes on to say this:
“
The
reason provided by the Applicant for its refusal or failure to issue
the TPPP Certificate is that the Company has committed
various Events
of Default and failed to keep up with its payments. This is clearly
expressed in paragraph 5 of the letter dated
19 August 2022 delivered
by the Applicant’s attorneys, ENSAfrica, to the Company. It is
disingenuous for the Applicant to
demand payments from the Company
when the former’s conduct has led to the demise of the
Company’s income due to its
inability to render services and
derive income.
”
[65]
He goes on to explain SmartPurse’s
function in the market, to provide “
integrated
payment solutions
” to entities,
including state-owned ones. Yet, he says, that its income “
subsided
”
in 2020 and 2021 “
and also due to
the conduct of the Applicant in failing to issue the Company with the
TPPP Certificate for the year commencing 1
March 2022
”.
He adds: “
I submit that the
Applicant’s unlawful conduct in refusing to issue the
Certificate was the main cause of the financial difficulties
suffered
by the Company.
”
[66]
Yet, as the applicant pointed out, if one
considers the chronology of events, as narrated by the first
respondent, when the TPPP
certificate came up for renewal, on his own
version, SmartPurse was already in distress. Indeed, this was so two
years before March
2022 already.
[67]
The applicant’s position is that the
renewal of SmartPurse’s TPPP certificate was conditional upon
its account being
in good standing. By the time of the contemplated
reissue, it was already in financial distress.
[68]
Accordingly, the applicant is correct in
maintaining that it cannot fairly be said that the applicant was
responsible for SmartPurse’s
financial distress.
[69]
Whatever the precise nature of the defence
of unclean hands, there is no factual basis here for its application.
[70]
Accordingly, neither of the substantive
defences has any substance.
COSTS
[71]
In clause 25 of the suretyships, provision
is made for costs that the applicant incurs in enforcing its rights
under the suretyships
to be awarded on the attorney-and-client scale.
[72]
The costs, on that scale, follow the
result.
ORDER
1. The first and
second respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved, are directed to pay R7,772,392.69
(Seven Million
Seven Hundred and Seventy-two Thousand Three Hundred and Ninety-two
Rand and Sixty-nine Cents), plus interest at
the rate of prime 11.75%
plus 0.50% calculated daily and compounded monthly in arrears from 3
October 2023 to date of payment,
both days inclusive.
2. The first and
second respondents are directed pay the costs of this application on
the attorney-and-client scale.
J J MEIRING
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
15 November 2023
Date of
judgment:
26 April 2024
APPEARANCES
For
the applicant:
Advocate K Mashishi
Instructed
by:
Edward Nathan Sonnenberg Inc.
For the
respondent:
Mr SM Ndobe
Instructed
by:
Ndobe Inc.
[1]
Ferris
v FirstRand Bank Ltd
2014
(3) SA 39
(CC), at 43G–44A.
[2]
Caesarstone
Sdot-Yam Ltd v World of Marble and Granite 2000 CC and Others
2013 (6) SA 499
(SCA), at para 2.
[3]
2020
(7) BCLR 779
(CC).
[4]
At
para 26.
[5]
Association
of Mineworkers and Construction Union v Ngululu Bulk Carriers (Pty)
Limited (in Liquidation)
2020 JDR 0733 (CC). See also
Keyter
NO v Van Der Meulen and Another NNO
2014 (5) SA 215
ECG, at 217E.
[6]
Caesarstone
,
at para 21.
[7]
Caesarstone
,
at para 22, quoting
Smith
v Porritt and Others
2008
(6) SA 303 (SCA).
[8]
Keyter
NO v Van Der Meulen and Another
NNO
2014 (5) SA 215
ECG, at 217F.
[9]
2004
(1) SA 454.
[10]
At
p 455.
[11]
As
quoted in the
LAWSA
quotation in paragraph 33 of
Man
Truck
,
they are a deceased and his heir; a principal and his agent; a
person under curatorship and his curator; a pupil and his tutor;
a
creditor and debtor and creditor in respect of a pledged article if
the debtor gave the article in pledge after losing a suit
in which a
third party had claimed it.
[12]
1931
AD 290.
[13]
At
p 299.
[14]
1976
(2) SA 856
(W), at 863D
–
865A.
[15]
2023
JDR 2981 (WCC).
[16]
At
para 17.
[17]
At
para
15.
[18]
At
para 9 of the respondent’s heads of argument.
[19]
1933
AD 165.
[20]
At
168.
[21]
2015
(8) BCLR 904 (CC).
[22]
At
para 19.
[23]
Caney’s
The Law of Suretyship
,
4
th
edn, pp 26–27.
[24]
Huneberg
v Watson’s Estate
1916
AD 116.
[25]
Corrans
v Tvl Government & Coull’s Trustee
1909
TS 605.
[26]
Neon
& Cold Cathode Illuminations
(
Pty
)
Ltd
v Ephron
1978 (1) SA 463
(A),
at 471C–D.
sino noindex
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