Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 658South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Madolo and Another (23434/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 658 (12 July 2024)
Headnotes
judgment, the Applicant (Plaintiff in the underlying matter) claims payment from the Respondents (Defendants in the underlying matter) of an outstanding mortgage-backed home loan, plus interest. The Applicant also seeks an order of special execution in terms of Rule 46A of the Uniform Rules of Court and proposes a reserve price in terms of Rule 46A(8)(e). (For the sake of simplicity, I refer to the parties throughout as Applicant and Respondents).
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Madolo and Another (23434/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 658 (12 July 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Madolo and Another (23434/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 658 (12 July 2024)
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sino date 12 July 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
IN
THE
HIGH
COURT
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case No:
23434/2019
1. Reportable: NO
2. Of Intrest To
Other Judges: NO
3. Revised.
In
the
matter
between:
STANDARD
BANK OF
SOUTH
AFRICA LIMITED
Applicant
and
SANDILE
MADOLO
First
Respondent
AGRINETH
NOZIBUSISI MADOLO
Second Respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by being uploaded
to caselines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 12h00
on 12 June 2024.
JUDGMENT
Osborne AJ:
1.
In an opposed application for summary judgment,
the Applicant (Plaintiff in the underlying matter) claims payment
from the Respondents
(Defendants in the underlying matter) of an
outstanding mortgage-backed home loan, plus interest. The Applicant
also seeks an order
of special execution in terms of Rule 46A of the
Uniform Rules of Court and proposes a reserve price in terms of Rule
46A(8)
(e
).
(For the sake of simplicity, I refer to the parties throughout as
Applicant
and
Respondents
).
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
2.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”) has remarked that the
purpose of the summary judgment procedure is to “Prevent
sham
defences from defeating the rights of parties by delay".
[1]
3.
The
remedy provided by Rule 32 has been described as “
extraordinary
”
.
[2]
It closes the doors of the Court to one of the parties, allowing
civil judgment without a trial. That being said, the SCA
has
observed:
"The
rationale for summary judgment proceedings is impeccable. The
procedure is not intended to deprive a defendant of a triable
issue
or a sustainable defence of her/his day in Court. After almost a
century of successful application in our courts, summary
judgment
proceedings can hardly continue to be described as extraordinary. Our
courts, both at the first instance and at the appellate
level, have
rightly been trusted to ensure that a defendant with a triable issue
is not shut out."
[3]
4.
Few would doubt the
need to conserve judicial resources. This is a pragmatic rationale
that has become all the more compelling in
light of the deluge of
litigation that threatens to overwhelm our understaffed and
under-resourced court system - particularly
in this division. Rule 32
envisages, in effect, a screening procedure to expeditiously clear
the roll of matters in which a defendant
has no triable case. This
benefits all parties by saving costs where the outcome of a trial is
a foregone conclusion on the pleadings.
It also serves the
administration of justice by helping to clear clogged rolls.
5.
But summary judgment
is not there for the taking. Rule 32 provides that the Applicant must
verify the cause of action and the amount
claimed, identify points of
law relied upon, identify the facts upon which its claim is based,
and explain briefly why the defence
as pleaded does not raise any
issue for trial.
6.
A Respondent opposing
summary judgment must, in turn, satisfy the court that it has a
bona
fide
defence
to the action. Its affidavit must disclose:
“
The
material facts upon which the defence is based … in a manner
which is ‘sufficiently full’ and complete enough
to
persuade the court that, if what is alleged is proved at trial, it
would constitute a defence to the claim. If the stated material
facts
are equivocal, ambiguous or contradictory or fail to canvas matters
which are essential to the defence which has been raised,
then the
affidavit will not comply with the rule and summary judgment will be
granted.”
[4]
BACKGROUND
7.
The facts of the matter may be succinctly stated:
Respondents admit their breach of the home loan agreement and their
default, which
leaves to be determined (1) the amount of the debt,
(2) the Rule 46A issue (i.e. whether a warrant of special execution
is warranted),
and, if so, (3) the appropriate reserve price.
8.
The parties concluded a home loan agreement on 28
May 2007. The debt was secured by a mortgage bond registered on 25
June 2008 in
the Applicant’s favour. Initially, the Respondents
complied with the terms of the loan agreement. Later, they fell into
default.
9.
On 16 July 2019, the Applicant served a summons;
on 19 July 2022, the Respondents delivered their plea; on 8 August
2022, the Applicant
delivered its application for summary judgment;
and on 11 November 2022, the Respondents delivered their affidavit
resisting summary
judgment.
THE APPLICANT’S
CASE
10.
The particulars of claim contend that:
10.1.
The Respondents are in breach of their obligation
under the home loan agreement.
10.2.
In consequence, the Applicant is contractually
entitled to claim payment of the full balance under the acceleration
clause in the
agreement whereby, in the event that any instalment
payment is defaulted upon, the amount secured by the bond would
become immediately
due and payable in full.
10.3.
The Applicant complied with the provisions of
sections 129
and
130
of the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
.
10.4.
The Applicant is entitled to a
Rule 46A
order
declaring the property executable.
10.5.
The Court should set an appropriate reserve price
for the sale in execution.
11.
As to the amount owing, the mortgage bond was
registered in favour of the Applicant in the amount of R1 140 000;
there was an initiation
fee in the amount of R5 560; and over and
above the principal, the Respondents were indebted and bound to pay
an additional sum
of R285 000 arising out of interest, including
arrears interest.
12.
The Applicant alleged that, as of the date of the
particulars, the arrears amounted to R581 250.90. (As reflected
in the Payment
Profile as of 1 July 2022, attached as an annexure to
the application for summary judgment.) The mortgage bond secured the
full
amount of the loan in the amount of R1 061 029.01
(excluding interest).
13.
The following appears in the Applicant’s
affidavit in support of summary judgment dated 8 August 2022:
13.1.
The Respondents' indebtedness as of 23 April 2019
amounted to R894 492, the balance of the total principal debt,
together with
finance charges, plus interest to the date of payment.
The arrears as of that date amounted to R85 530.
13.2.
While at one point in their plea, the Respondents
alleged that the amount owed per the summons was less than R100 000
(against a
property value of over R5 million), they admitted the
allegation that the amount owed was R894 000.
13.3.
The Respondents were in arrears in the amount of
R581 000.
13.4.
The full amount owed to the Applicant and secured
by the bond was R1 061 029.
14.
These updated figures appear in a Certificate of
Balance (“CoB”), handed up at the hearing (and uploaded
on
CaseLines
),
purporting to reflect the status of the account as of 20 May
2024:
14.1.
The amount in arrears had risen to some R882 753.
14.2.
The total amount due is R908 823.
14.3.
The overall indebtedness is R1 042 708.
Respondents’
Submissions as to Amount of Debt
15.
In their plea, the Respondents admit most of the
allegations in the particulars, including, as we have seen, the
amount outstanding.
However, the Respondents demand that the balance
of the mortgage bond be recalculated. (It is also stated that the
property is
the primary residence of the Respondents, who say they
will soon be in a position to pay the arrears outstanding.)
16.
In the Respondents’ answering affidavit in
the following figures appear:
16.1.
The initial loan was R1 140 000.
16.2.
The municipal valuation is R4.4 million. (No
documentation evidencing that valuation is attached.)
16.3.
The Respondents have paid over R1.8 million, some
in bulk payments in 2015, so the principal has hence been paid in
full.
16.4.
In addition, R660 000 has been paid over and above
the principal debt. The R585 000 demanded by the Applicant is
“interest
on interest." Hence, there was no “genuine
monetary prejudice” to the Applicant.
17.
Regarding their personal circumstances, the
Respondents allege that the COVID-19 pandemic rendered them unable to
find employment
and meet their financial obligations. Moreover, the
effect of the government measures taken in response to the pandemic
had “recalibrated”
the terms of the loan at issue. It is
stated further that the First Respondent holds a Master’s
degree and that the Second
Respondent has a PhD in biochemistry.
18.
In their short heads of argument (two
pages), the Respondents allege that it is common cause that the
property is valued in excess
of R5 million.
EVALUATION –
AMOUNT OF THE DEBT
19.
In
the absence of documentation submitted by the Respondents regarding
the figures, the Court has no choice but to accept the Applicant’s
well-documented figures as set forth in the
Particulars
of Claim, as updated in the CoB
.
[5]
It would not have been difficult for the Respondents — both
highly educated and accomplished persons — to present
statements, proof of payments, and other documentation to support
their claims to have paid considerably more than the Applicant
alleges.
20.
Moreover,
the Respondents did not contest the CoB. It may, hence, be treated as
sufficient proof of the amount alleged by the Applicant
to be due and
owed.
[6]
21.
One notes that the
Respondents state in their opposing affidavit
that an effort will be made to have the
interest on the loan calculated by a “qualified person”.
But no such evidence
has been forthcoming. Even had there been a
procedural basis for the Respondents’ submissions that the
amount due should
be “recalculated”, the Respondents have
failed to come forward with material that could form the basis of
such an exercise.
22.
The
Respondents allege in passing that the Applicant is charging
"interest on interest." This is an apparent reference
to
the
in
duplum
rule,
under which
arrears
interest ceases to accrue once the sum of the unpaid interest equals
the amount of the outstanding capital.
[7]
However, the Respondents have not properly pleaded any of this,
failing even to specify the component of the claim that is
attributable
to interest. As to the Respondents' proposal that
"monetary prejudice" factors into the equation, that is a
concept alien
to our jurisprudence.
23.
The Respondents’ claim that the terms
of their bond were “recalibrated” in the Covid period is
also not properly
pleaded; no documentary foundation has been laid
for that claim. Finally, an allegation that a debtor is willing –
albeit
not currently able – to settle a debt has never been
considered a defence. Hence, it cannot be said that a
bona
fide
defence has been disclosed.
24.
I find, therefore, that the Respondents are
indebted to the Applicant in the amount of R894 492.82 under the
terms of their loan
agreement entered into on 28 May 2007.
APPLICATION FOR
WRIT OF EXECUTION
25.
The Constitutional Court has imposed constraints
upon the grant of an order of execution where the effect would be to
evict an indigent
litigant from his or her primary residence. Hence
it is that a Court is obliged to consider certain factors before
declaring residential
property executable.
26.
Rule
46A
does not vitiate
the
principle
that a judgment creditor is entitled to execute upon the assets of a
judgment debtor in satisfaction of a judgment debt.
It goes no
further than requiring that, before ordering execution against a
primary residence, due regard must be had to the
impact upon
judgment debtors who are poor
.
[8]
The point bears emphasis given the facts presented
in
casu
.
The focus of
Rule 46A
is the protection, as put by the SCA, of
“
vulnerable
and poor beneficiaries who are occupying the immovable property owned
by the judgment debtor
.”
[9]
27.
The Respondents here have not alleged on affidavit
that they are either “vulnerable” or “poor”.
Nor have
they alleged that they will be rendered homeless if the
property is sold in execution.
28.
The
onus is on the judgment debtor to provide the court with information
concerning the circumstance warranting the protection embodied
in
Rule 46A
.
U
nless
the judgment debtor discloses material weighing against an eviction
order, such an order should issue, because the relevant
circumstances
are invariably within the exclusive knowledge of the occupier.
[10]
If
a debtor’s attention has been drawn to the provisions of
s
26
(1)
of
the Constitution and Rule 46(1)
(a)
(ii),
and the debtor fails to avail himself of his rights, the obligation
to exercise judicial oversight under Rule 46A is limited.
[11]
29.
In the particulars of claim
in
casu,
the Respondents were advised that
it was incumbent upon them to place information supporting their
claims before the Court. Also
explained were the limits imposed upon
execution of a residence by the Constitution - specifically that,
where the property attached
is the primary residence of the
Respondents, no order shall issue until the Court considers the
circumstances set out in Rule 46A.
30.
The Applicant advances the following allegations
in support of its prayer for a writ of execution:
30.1.
Because the Respondents are not indigent, and
could afford to lease a property elsewhere, there is no real risk of
them being rendered
homeless.
30.2.
The Applicant attempted in good faith to assist
the Respondents to regularise their position under the loan
agreements.
30.3.
The Respondents had shown themselves neither
willing nor able to satisfy the judgment debt by paying the
Applicant.
30.4.
There are no alternative or less invasive means
available for satisfying the judgment debt.
31.
The Respondents do not seriously contest the above
in their plea – save to say that they are willing (albeit
currently unable)
to satisfy the judgment debt for the reason that
the First Respondent is currently unemployed. The First Respondent
did say
that
he anticipated earning R40 000 a month in a new job. (One finds no
update on this in the Respondents’ answering affidavit
to the
application for summary judgment.) It is stated further that Second
Respondent is employed in the real estate market, but
that business
conditions remain poor in the wake of the Covid pandemic. None of
this is documented.
32.
This
does not avail the Respondents. As we have seen, it is not alleged
that they are indigent, nor that a sale in execution will
render them
homeless.
[12]
33.
Their
unelaborated allegations regarding the effects of the pandemic add
nothing; vague open-ended allegations do not stand in the
way of
summary judgment.
[13]
34.
In the premises I find that
is fair and equitable for an order of special execution to issue.
This will necessarily occasion distress
for those subject to that
remedy - even if they are not among the vulnerable and poor, with
whom Rule 46A is primarily concerned.
This disruption may be
mitigated by suspending the execution order for a reasonable period
to permit the Respondents to make the
necessary arrangements.
RESERVE PRICE
35.
Rule
46A(8)(e) empowers the court to set a reserve price, the purpose of
which is to protect debtors by ensuring that homes are
not sold in
execution for prices well below market, potentially bequeathing them
a crushing debt after they have already lost their
homes. While
Rule
46A(8) provides only that a court “may” set a
reserve
price,
a court should ordinarily set such a price, save where special
considerations suggest otherwise.
[14]
36.
Determining a reserve price
is no exact science. The court must strike a balance between
protecting the interests of the judgment
creditor in recovering a
substantial amount of what it is owed, on the one hand, and the
aforementioned interests of the judgment
debtor, on the other hand.
The
price should not be set so high as to hamper the expeditious
realisation of the property's value - which is plainly in the
interests of both debtor and creditor - nor so low as to operate
unfairly to the debtor, who stands to see her or his accumulated
equity built up over years evaporate in a forced sale.
37.
According to the sworn independent valuation
attached to the Applicant’s supplemental affidavit, as of 5
October 2023 the
market value of the property was R5 million. (A
figure consistent with the Respondents’ undocumented market
value estimate
in their plea). The Applicant’s sworn
independent valuation estimates the forced sale value of R4 million.
Then, the Applicant's
supplemental affidavit shows that the
municipality lists R262 175.12 as owing in rates and taxes, while the
homeowner’s association
reports outstanding levies of
R160 951.93. Flowing from these figures, the Applicant proposes
a reserve price of R3 576 872.95.
I find this an appropriate figure,
given the material that has served before this court and in the
absence of opposition to that
figure from the Respondents.
ORDER
38.
It is ordered that:
38.1.
The Respondents pay the
Applicant the sum of R894 492.82 with interest thereon at the rate of
8.5% per annum calculated from 29 April
2019 to date of payment,
both days inclusive.
38.2.
The immovable property,
properly described as:
Erf
1[…] S[…] Township
Registration
division JR.
Gauteng
In
extent, 1,966 metres squared.
Held
under deed of transfer number T[…]
Subject
to the conditions contained therein and further subject to the
conditions imposed by the Home Owners Association. (The "Property"))
be
declared executable for the aforegoing amount, subject to suspension,
this component of the present order being suspended for
six months
from the date hereof.
38.3.
The Registrar of this Court
is authorised and instructed to issue a warrant of execution against
the immovable property and that
it
be
sold by the Sheriff of the above Honourable Court at a duly
constituted sale in execution, subject to a
reserve
price of
R3 576 872.95.
38.4.
The Respondents shall pay
the Applicant's party-and-party costs at a scale prescribed in Scale
A of Rule 69(7) of the Rules of Court
with respect to costs incurred
from 12 April 2024 and under the costs regime prevailing before that
date with respect to costs
incurred prior thereto.
SO ORDERED
OSBORNE AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
[1]
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
2009
(5) SA 1
(SCA), para 31.
[2]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976
(1) SA 418 (A) 423.
[3]
J
oob
Joob
,
para 32.
[4]
Eclipse
Systems and Another v He & She Investments (Pty) Ltd and a
Related Matter
2020
(6) SA 497
(WCC), para 16.
[5]
See
Senekal
v Trust Bank Of Africa Ltd
1978
(3) SA 375
(A), 383 (
prima
facie
evidence
afforded by a certificate of debt can mature into sufficient proof
if not challenged.)
[6]
Investec
Bank Ltd v Fraser NO and Others
2020
(6) SA 211
(GJ), para 86 (Respondent had not alleged prejudice
arising from certificate of balance, nor had she applied for leave
to file
a further affidavit in response.)
[7]
See
Paulsen
and Another v Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Ltd
2015
(3) SA 479
(CC), para 42 (Madlanga J (Jafta J
et
Nkabinde
J concurring).)
[8]
Gundwana
v Steko Development and Others
2011
(3) SA 608
(CC) para 53.
[9]
Petrus
Johannes Bestbier and Others v Nedbank Limited
(150/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 88
;
2023 (4) SA 25
(SCA) (13 June 2022), para 27,
upheld by the Constitutional Court in April 2024. See
Petrus
Johannes Bestbier and Others v Nedbank
2024
JDR 1551 (CC).
[10]
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo; Bekker v Jika
2003(1)
SA 113 (SCA) para 19.
[11]
See
NPGS
Protection & Security Services CC v FirstRand Bank Ltd
2020
(1) SA 494 (SCA)
at paras 63–67.
[12]
G
undwana
v Steko Development and Others
2011
(3) SA 608
(CC) para 53 (the principles embodied in Rule 46A enjoin
courts, in ordering execution against immovable property, to have
due
regard to the impact upon judgment debtors “
who
are poor and at risk of losing their homes
.”)
(Emphasis added).
[13]
N
PGS
,
supra para
67
(“A
vague
and unspecified mention of a personal residence without more does
not suffice
as
a defence
”
.)
The Court suggested also that excessive constraints upon execution
may have an adverse unintended consequence, causing damage
to the
efficient provision of credit in the economy.
## [14]Absa
Bank Limited v Mokebe; Absa Bank Limited v Kobe; Absa Bank Limited v
Vokwani; Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Colombick
and
Another[2018]
ZAGPJHC 487 (12 September 2018), para 66.
[14]
Absa
Bank Limited v Mokebe; Absa Bank Limited v Kobe; Absa Bank Limited v
Vokwani; Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Colombick
and
Another
[2018]
ZAGPJHC 487 (12 September 2018), para 66.
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