Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 759South Africa
Nedbank Limited v Moeletsi N.O and Another (17616-2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 759 (16 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 August 2024
Headnotes
there is no express provision in the Act which can be construed as depriving an Applicant of its common law right against a deceased estate. Accordingly the common law right in effect remains extant (over and above the creditor's right to lodge a claim against the deceased estate in terms of the Act).
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nedbank Limited v Moeletsi N.O and Another (17616-2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 759 (16 August 2024)
Nedbank Limited v Moeletsi N.O and Another (17616-2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 759 (16 August 2024)
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sino date 16 August 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 17616/2022
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED YES
In
the matter between
NEDBANK LIMITED
(Registration
Number: 1951/000009/06)
Applicant
And
GADIFELE SOPHIE
MOELETSI N.O.
(Identity number:
7[...])
First Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
,
JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
WANLESS J
Introduction
[1]
In this application NEDBANK LIMITED
("the Applicant")
seeks the return of a motor vehicle from one GADIFELE SOPHIE MOELETSI
N.O.
("the Frist Respondent")
. The First
Respondent is the duly appointed
executrix
of the deceased
estate of DANIEL RAUTSHIO MOELETSI
("the deceased")
.
Arising therefrom, THE MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT (JOHANNESBURG) is
cited as the Second Respondent. No relief is sought
by the
Applicant against the Second Respondent.
[2]
It was always the intention of this Court to deliver a written
judgment in this matter. In light of,
inter alia,
the
onerous workload under which this Court has been placed, this has
simply not been possible without incurring further delays
in the
handing down thereof. In the premises, this judgment is being
delivered
ex tempore.
Once transcribed, it will be
"converted"
, or more correctly
"transformed",
into a written judgment and provided to the parties. In
this manner, neither the quality of the judgment nor the time in
which
the judgment is delivered, will be compromised. This
Court is indebted to the transcription services of this Division who
generally provide transcripts of judgments emanating from this Court
within a short period of time following the delivery thereof
on an
ex
tempore
basis.
Facts which are common cause
[3]
The facts which are either common cause in this matter or cannot be
seriously disputed by either party, are the following:
3.1 on the 24
th
of
October 2017 the Applicant and the deceased entered into a written
Instalment Sale Agreement
("the agreement")
;
3.2 the Applicant could cancel
the agreement and claim liquidated damages from the deceased if he
committed a material breach
of the agreement, including if the
deceased died
(which he did)
;
3.3 on default and without
prejudicing the Applicant's other rights the Applicant may,
inter
alia
, cancel the agreement, take possession of the asset and
claim from the deceased an amount equivalent to the outstanding
balance
less the market value of the asset at the date of
cancellation of the agreement;
3.4 the Applicant may provide a
certificate from any one of its managers, whose position the
Applicant need not prove, showing
the amount that is due and how it
is calculated.Unless the deceased was able to satisfy the court that
the amount in the certificate
was incorrect, it was agreed that the
Applicant may take any judgment or order that it is entitled to in
law, based on the facts
contained in the certificate;
3.5 the deceased acknowledged
that the Applicant was the owner of the goods and would remain so
until all obligations and
repayments to the Applicant had been
fulfilled by the deceased after which he would become the owner;
3.6 the Applicant has complied
with all its obligations in terms of the agreement; and
3.7 the Deceased died on 10 June
2021.
The issues
[4]
Arising from the application papers in this matter the following
issues fall to be adjudicated by this Court, namely:
4.1 whether the Applicant has
complied with section 129 of the
National Credit Act 34 of
2000 ("the NCA");
4.2 whether the application is
premature, incompetent and/or unlawful and in conflict with the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 ("the Act");
4.3 whether the amount claimed
by the Applicant was correct and/or competent to be claimed;
4.4 non-receipt on behalf of the
First Respondent of the Applicant's demand;
4.5 that the deponent to the
Applicant's Founding Affidavit does not explain where he derives his
authority to do so and to
represent the Applicant.
Whether the Applicant has
complied with section 129 of the NCA
[5]
This defence by the First Respondent illustrates how the First
Respondent has misconstrued the Applicant's cause of action. The
Applicant seeks only the return of the motor vehicle following upon
the death of the Deceased. In terms of the agreement the Applicant
is
entitled to the aforegoing relief. It is clear that the
Applicant's cause of action is based upon the
rei vindicatio.
Ownership of the motor vehicle still vests with the Applicant.
[6]
The Applicant does
not
seek, in the present application,
payment from the First Respondent. In the premises, the
so-called "
issue
" as to whether section 129 of the
act has been complied with by the Applicant, is in fact a
"
non-issue
".
[7]
The aforegoing and the misunderstanding by the First Respondent as to
the Applicant's cause of action, as will become apparent
hereunder,
is a fundamental flaw in respect of this defence as raised by the
First Respondent to the relief sought by the Applicant
in this
application.
Whether the application is
premature, incompetent and/or unlawful and in conflict with the Act
[8]
The First Respondent alleges,
inter alia,
that:
8.1 as the
executrix
of
the estate of the deceased she is entrusted with custody and control
of the property in the estate in terms of section 26 of
the Act;
8.2 the Applicant had to lodge
its claim with the Second Respondent before approaching court;
8.3 at death the estate of the
deceased person is frozen and no-one may withdraw funds from the
deceased's bank account or
deal with any of the estate assets without
the necessary permission from the Master of the High Court;
8.4 this application is
therefore premature as the Applicant has not submitted its claim and
the liquidation and distribution
accounts of the estate of the
deceased have not yet been finalised and/or approved by the Master.
[9]
As correctly submitted on behalf of the Applicant the claims
procedure against a deceased estate is governed by,
inter alia,
section 35 read with sections 29, 32, 33 and 34 of the Act. In
the matter of
Nedbank Limited v Steyn and Others
2016 (2) SA
416
(SCA) which dealt with the issue as to whether the procedure
provided in the Act precluded a creditor from its common law right
to
institute action against the deceased estate for payment in terms of
a loan agreement, the SCA held that there is no express
provision in
the Act which can be construed as depriving an Applicant of its
common law right against a deceased estate. Accordingly
the common
law right in effect remains extant (over and above the creditor's
right to lodge a claim against the deceased estate
in terms of the
Act).
[10] The Applicant is
accordingly entitled to have brought this application and the
application is not premature, incompetent
and/or unlawful as alleged
by the First Respondent.
Whether the amount claimed by
the Applicant was correct and/or competent to be claimed
[11] In respect of this defence
raised by the First Respondent it is correct that, as submitted on
behalf of the Applicant,
the Applicant is not claiming or seeking any
amounts or monetary relief at this stage. For this reason this
defence must
fail in the present application (
Paragraphs [5] to
[7] ibid).
Alleged non-receipt on behalf of
the First Respondent of the Applicant's demand
[12] The First Respondent
alleges that despite the Applicant's proof of service through
registered post, she did not receive
any demand from the Applicant
and that she only set eyes on the demand annexed to the application
when the application was delivered
at her residence.
[13] On 16 March 2022 the
Applicant, through its attorneys of record, delivered the letter of
demand via registered mail to,
inter alia,
the First
Respondent's residential address. A copy of the said letter and proof
of dispatch is attached to the Applicant's Founding
Affidavit.
[14] Notwithstanding the above
the First Respondent admits having received the letter with the
application and has taken no
steps to act in accordance therewith or
to attempt to make any arrangement with the Applicant or to engage
with the Applicant in
respect of a reasonable repayment structure.
This while retaining possession of the asset.
[15] In the premises, the First
Respondent cannot rely on this defence to support her opposition to
the relief sought by the
Applicant.
Deponent to the Applicant's
Founding Affidavit does not explain where he derives his authority to
do so and to represent the Applicant.
[16] The First Respondent
alleges that the Applicant is a juristic
persona
and the
deponent does not explain where he derives his authority to represent
the Applicant. It was submitted, on behalf of the
Applicant, that the
deponent to the Founding Affidavit states, under oath, that she is
duly authorised to depose to the Founding
Affidavit and to make this
application on behalf of the Applicant.
[17] The First Respondent, or
her attorneys of record, never challenged or disputed the authority
of the Applicant's attorneys
of record, in terms of subrule 7(1) of
the Uniform Rules of Court, or at all (
Eskom v Soweto City Council
1992 (2) SA 703
(W));
Unlawful Occupiers School Site v City of
Johannesburg
2005 (4) SA 199
(SCA)).
[18] In the premises, this
defence. as raised by the First Respondent, has no merit.
Conclusion
[19] It must follow from the
aforegoing that the Applicant is entitled to the relief sought. Put
simply, that relief is supported
by the material terms of the
agreement entered into between the Applicant and the Deceased,
together with the Applicant's reliance
upon the
rei vindicatio.
Costs
[20] Apart from the fact that
the agreement itself provides for costs on an attorney and client
scale, it is trite that, unless
unusual circumstances exist, costs
should normally follow the result. It is also trite that a court has
a general discretion in
respect of costs.
[21] No unusual circumstances
have been brought to the attention of this Court. Moreover, no facts
have been placed before
this Court as to why there should be a
deviation from the scale of costs agreed to by the parties. In the
premises, it would be
just and equitable if the First Respondent was
ordered to pay the costs of this application on the scale of attorney
and client.
Order
[22] This Court makes the
following order:
1
the Applicant is entitled to take possession of the undermentioned
asset and to sell the asset in order to mitigate the Applicant's
damages;
2017
Maza CX-5 2.0 Active;
Chassis
number; J[…]
Engine
number; P[…]
("the
asset")
2
Should the First Respondent fail and/or refuse to deliver the asset
to the Applicant, or its authorised representatives, the Sheriff
with
jurisdiction is authorised and directed to remove and/or repossess
the asset from the First Respondent, or any third party
who may be in
possession thereof and to return and/or deliver the asset the
Applicant.
3
The cancellation of the Instalment Sale Agreement is confirmed.
4
The First Respondent is to pay the costs of this application on the
attorney and client scale.
B. C WANLESS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
19
February 2024
Date
of
ex tempore
:
14
August 2024
Date
of written Judgment:
16
August 2024
Appearances
On
behalf of the Applicant:
Adv.
A. J. Reyneke
Instructed
by:
Uys
Matyeka Sxhwartz Attorneys
On
behalf of the First Respondent:
Unknown
Instructed
by:
TJP
Attorneys
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