Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 986South Africa
Mokoena v Firstrand Bank Limited (35888/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 986 (30 September 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mokoena v Firstrand Bank Limited (35888/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 986 (30 September 2024)
Mokoena v Firstrand Bank Limited (35888/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 986 (30 September 2024)
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sino date 30 September 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO.: 35888/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED:
NO.
30/9/2024
In
the matter between:
TREVOR
THABANG MOKOENA
APPLICANT
and
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED
RESPONDENT
In
re:
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 on 30 September 2024.
JUDGMENT
MEIRING, AJ:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application by which the
applicant for leave – the first respondent in the application
proper – seeks leave
to appeal against the order that this
court handed down on 26 April 2024 by which the
first
and second respondents were directed, jointly and severally, to pay
R7,772,392.69, plus interest, and to pay the costs of
this
application on the attorney-and-client scale.
[2]
This application for appeal was heard
virtually on the morning of Friday, 26 July 2024. Both the applicant
for leave and the respondent
in this application were represented at
the hearing.
[3]
The applicant had delivered a detailed
notice of appeal. The respondent had submitted written heads of
argument. I had regard to
both, and, of course, to the oral argument
made before me.
The law
[4]
The test whether leave to appeal is to be
granted is framed in section 17(1) of the Superior Court Act, 2013:
“
17.
Leave to appeal
(1)
Leave to
appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are of
the opinion that
–
(a) (i)
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success
; or
(ii)
there is
some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration
;
(b) the
decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of section
16(2)(a); and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of
all the issues in the case, the appeal would lead to a just
and
prompt resolution of the real issues between the parties
.”
[emphasis added]
[5]
The applicant does not say whether he
brings this application under section 17(1)(a)(i) or (ii). Yet, the
complaints that he serries
indicate that he relies only on section
17(1)(a)(i). Thus, he asks this court for leave on the basis that
“
the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success
”.
[6]
The
correct legal position is that, if the applicant demonstrates that
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success (and
the
requirements in section 17(1)(b) and (c) are also met), the court
must grant leave to appeal. The exercise of the power to
grant leave
is not then in the discretion of the court.
[1]
[7]
The
wording of section 17(1)(a)(i) does not set the threshold for leave
to appeal any higher than it was at common law before the
promulgation of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
. In this regard, I
refer to the exposition in the judgment in the application for leave
in the related case of
Smartpurse
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v FirstRand Bank Ltd
.
[2]
[8]
In
its unreported decision in
Ramakatsa
v African National Congress
,
[3]
the Supreme Court of Appeal explained the test for leave to
appeal:
[4]
“
If
a reasonable prospect of success is established, leave to appeal
should be granted. Similarly, if there are some other compelling
reasons why the appeal should be heard, leave to appeal should be
granted.
The test of reasonable
prospects of success postulates a dispassionate decision based on the
facts and the law that a court of appeal
could reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different to that of the trial court
.
In other words, the appellants in this matter need to convince this
Court on proper grounds that they have prospects of success
on
appeal.
Those prospects of
success must not be remote, but there must exist a reasonable chance
of succeeding. A sound rational basis for
the conclusion that there
are prospects of success must be shown to exist
.
”
[emphasis added]
Analysis of the case
for leave
[9]
In large part, the case for leave is a
rerunning of the arguments advanced at first instance.
[10]
In the first place, the applicant said
that, since the principal debt upon which his liability as surety
rests “
was disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds
”,
this “
prevented
”
the court from handing down the order narrated in paragraph 1 above.
Yet, by making this argument, the applicant simply
repeated what he
had said at the hearing of the application. He failed to indicate in
what respects the reasoning of this court
in its judgment erred such
that there might be a “
sound
rational basis
” for the
conclusion that there is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal.
For him to have provided such a basis, the
applicant must have
addressed the analysis and the dismissal of his two substantive
defences, namely that the respondent ought
first to
“
have
exhausted the domestic remedy in clause 14.2.7.1
”
(dealt with in paragraphs 56–61 of the
judgment) and that the respondent’s dealings with the TPPP
certificate meant
that it had approached this court with unclean
hands (dealt with at paragraphs 62–69 of the judgment). Both in
his notice
of application for leave and at the hearing, the applicant
failed to address the detail and logic of that analysis. Accordingly,
as to this first ground, the applicant failed to set out a sound
rational basis for his contention that he might succeed on appeal,
in
other words that there is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal.
[11]
Second,
the applicant contended that the
exceptio
lis alibi pendens
applies on these facts and ought to have been upheld. He did so by
saying that the bringing of the application for final winding-up
of
the company, Smartpurse, was aimed at obtaining payment of “
a
debt ostensibly owed to the Bank, thereby establishing a first cause
of action
”
and that, by, at the same time, suing on the suretyship, the
respondent “
sought
to rely on the same cause of action in separate and distinct
proceedings from those that were already pending and which concerned
the same subject matter
”.
Yet, neither in the notice of application for leave, nor at the
hearing, did the applicant address the analysis in paragraphs
29–44
of the judgment, in which this court indicated in careful detail why
the requirements of the
exceptio
lis alibi pendens
do not apply. The applicant did not address the obviously directly
contrary decisions in
Collett
v
Priest
,
[5]
Prudential
Shippers SA Ltd
v
Tempest
Clothing Co (Pty) Ltd
,
[6]
and
Electrolux
South Africa (Pty) Ltd
v
Rentek
Consulting (Pty) Ltd
.
[7]
By
closing his eyes to that analysis and to those decisions, the
applicant failed, as far as this complaint goes, from providing
a
sound rational basis for the conclusion that he has a reasonable
prospect of success on appeal. Indeed, the same applies to each
of
the other grounds, which I proceed to address
seriatim
,
as it were.
[12]
Third,
the applicant said that, by launching “
multiple
proceedings on the same cause of action
”,
the respondent acted “
in
a manner highly prejudicial both to the principal debtor and to
the sureties
”
and that, in these circumstances, “
[t]he prevailing
authorities require that … the Applicant (as surety) should be
exempted from liability,
inter
alia
,
on the grounds of Public Policy
”.
In this regard, the applicant relied upon the decision in
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited v Gounden and Another
.
[8]
Yet, neither in his notice of application for leave, nor in argument,
did the applicant provide any basis for his characterisation
that the
two motions proceeded on the same cause of action, in the face of the
authorities referred to in the previous paragraph
that say
diametrically the opposite. Nor, indeed, could he indicate how the
Gounden
decision is on all fours with the facts here. That court called that
case a “
knife
edge
”
or very rare case where, on the facts, there was a chance that the
respondent’s defences might benefit from a referral
to trial.
Here, the applicant did not ask for such a referral, nor was there
any suggestion at the hearing that a referral to evidence
might be
required. Nor, indeed, is the decision in
Jans
v Nedcor Bank Ltd
[9]
applicable. The applicant has not indicated any respect in which the
respondent brought himself within the ambit of the rule that
a surety
will be released where a creditor does something in his dealings with
the principal debtor that has the effect of prejudicing
the surety.
[13]
The
applicant’s attempt, in passing, to rely on the unreported
decision in
First Rand
Bank v Vega Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
[10]
to contend that he had rebutted the
prima
facie
proof of the certificates of balance, must similarly fail. Not only
did the applicant not address this defence in the answering
affidavit, but he did not even respond at all to the paragraph in the
founding affidavit to which those certificates were attached
and in
which they were mentioned.
[14]
Finally, the applicant’s complaint
based on the principle of
pacta sunt
servanda
is baseless. It is simply a
repackaging of the first substantive defence, which I address above.
The
pacta sunt servanda
principle cannot assist where the term upon which a litigant seeks to
rely does not apply to these facts, as this court found is
the case
here. The applicant does not say how the analysis in the judgment is
incorrect in this regard.
[15]
As I say above, none of the complaints that
the applicant advances holds any water. Having applied the test
formulated in the Supreme
Court of Appeal’s decision in
Ramakatsa
,
in other words, having
dispassionately
considered the facts and the law, I find that there is no sound
rational basis for the conclusion that in this matter
there is a
reasonable prospect of success on appeal.
Costs
[16]
The costs are to follow the result,
including the costs of counsel, taxed on the “B” scale.
Order
1. This application
for leave to appeal is dismissed.
2. The applicant
for leave will pay the respondent’s costs, which may be taxed
on the “B” scale.
J J MEIRING
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of
hearing:
26 July 2024
Date of
judgment:
30
September 2024
APPEARANCES
For
the applicant:
Mr
S M Ndobe
Instructed
by:
Ndobe
Inc.
For
the respondent:
Advocate
K Mashishi
Instructed
by:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenberg Inc.
[1]
Erasmus
Superior
Court Practice
,
vol 1, A2-54.
[2]
Case
no. 35882/2022.
[3]
(724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021).
[4]
At
para 10.
[5]
1931
AD 290.
[6]
1976
(2) SA 856
(W).
[7]
2023
JDR 2981 (WCC).
[8]
(19577/2019)
[2020] ZAWCHC 136
(28 October 2020).
[9]
[2003]
2 All SA 11 (SCA).
[10]
(7841/19)
[2020] ZAGPJHC 423 (10 May 2020).
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