Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1113South Africa
Habib Overseas Bank Limited v Crestar Printers and Publishers (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/35904) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1113 (31 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
31 October 2024
Headnotes
BY TITLE DEED NUMBER T33541/2001 MEASURING 1123 (ONE THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED AND
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Habib Overseas Bank Limited v Crestar Printers and Publishers (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/35904) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1113 (31 October 2024)
Habib Overseas Bank Limited v Crestar Printers and Publishers (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/35904) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1113 (31 October 2024)
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sino date 31 October 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO: 2021/35904
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
31
October 2024
In
the matter between:
HABIB OVERSEAS BANK
LIMITED
(IN
LIQUIDATION)
Applicant
and
CRESTAR PRINTERS
AND PUBLISHERS
(PTY)
LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
First
Respondent
IKRAAM
JAFFER
Second
Respondent
SALAHHUDDEEN
JAFFER
Third
Respondent
HAWA
JAFFER
Fourth
Respondent
DR
TANWIR JAFFER
Fifth
Respondent
IKRAAM JAFFER N.O.
(TRUSTEE FOR THE TIME
BEING OF THE AHMED
JAFFER FAMILY TRUST)
(IT
13346/07)
Sixth
Respondent
RASHIDA OMAR N.O.
(THE EXECUTRIX IN THE
ESTATE
LATE SHEIK HASSAN OMAR)
Seventh
Respondent
GHOUSBIBI
ARIFULLAH CC
Eighth
Respondent
THE EXECUTOR IN THE
ESTATE OF THE LATE
AHMED
HASSAN JAFFER
Ninth
Respondent
HAWA
JAFFER N.O.
Tenth
Respondent
SALAHHUDDEEN
JAFFER N.O.
Eleventh
Respondent
DR
TANWIR JAFFER N.O.
Twelfth
Respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties and/or
parties’ representatives by email and by
upload to CaseLines.
The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 10h00 on 31 October
2024
JUDGMENT
S VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This matter started off
with the names of nine respondents and, by the time it came to the
hearing thereof, there were twelve respondents
before the Court (they
represent eight of the parties properly cited). No relief is sought
against the ninth respondent in terms
of the applicant’s draft
order. It is alleged in argument that no executor has been appointed
for the ninth respondent who
passed away prior to the commencement of
the proceedings. The first respondent was placed in liquidation
by special resolution
registered on 5 May 2022 and the liquidators,
Adriaan Willem van Rooyen N.O. and Safiyah Ebrahim Cook N.O.
appointed on 18 November
2022. The liquidators were substituted for
the first respondent on 2 March 2023. The Notice of substitution
refers to them as joint
provisional liquidators but the Certificate
issued by the Master on 18 November 2022 makes it clear that they are
joint liquidators.
[2]
Due to the fact that the
sixth respondent is not the only trustee for the time being of the
Ahmed Jaffer Family Trust (IT 13346/07),
the tenth, eleventh and
twelfth respondents also had to be joined to the proceedings. This
took place on 21 April 2022.
[3]
Prior to the matter being
heard, the seventh respondent passed away and it became necessary to
substitute the seventh respondent
with his executrix, i.e. Rashida
Omar N.O.
[4]
The aforesaid events,
coupled with the fact that the papers, as originally served, were
defective in that certain pages was missing,
caused several delays.
The applicant ultimately went into provisional liquidation and became
represented by one Kajee Zeenath as
provisional liquidator with
extended powers including the power to litigate. On 10 May 2024 an
application for leave to file a
supplementary affidavit was brought
by Naadira Sheik Omar, being the daughter of the late Sheik Hassan
Omar (the seventh respondent),
and also a member of the eighth
respondent,
Ghousbibi
Arifullah CC. The application was also brought by on behalf of
Rashida Omar in her capacity as executrix in the estate
of Sheik
Hassan Omar. She also filed a confirmatory affidavit.
[5]
The main matter with the
application to supplement came to me in the opposed motion court on
16 May 2024 and all defences to the
plaintiff’s claims against
the respondents were argued.
[6]
For the
sake of convenience, the applicant will be referred to as “the
bank” and the various respondents either by their
surnames or
number as respondent, as may be convenient and the executrix of the
seventh respondent as “the executrix”
BACKGROUND
[7]
The bank issued
proceedings in this matter on 26 July 2021, claiming the following
relief:
“
1.1
Payment of the sum of R5 133 581,05 (Five Million One Hundred
and Thirty Three Thousand Five Hundred and Eighty
One Rand and Five
Cents) plus accrued interest thereon on R14 797,43 (Fourteen
Thousand Seven Hundred and Ninety-Seven Rand
and Forty-Three Cents)
on the total capital plus interest calculated at the rate of prime
plus one per cent from the 9
th
of June 2021
to date of final payment, both days inclusive, being the amount due
and owing by the first respondent to the applicant
in respect of the
overdraft facilities accorded by applicant to first respondent.
1.2
Payment of the sum of R4 195 255.00 (Four Million One
Hundred and Ninety-Five Thousand Two Hundred
and Fifty-Five Rand)
plus accrued interest of R11 953.60 (Eleven Thousand Nine
Hundred and Fifty-Three Rand and Sixty Cents)
plus interest on the
9
th
of June 2021 calculated at the rate of prime plus one
per cent compounded monthly and subject to change as and when the
bank’s
prime rate changes, due and owing by the first
respondent to the applicant in respect of a loan advanced by the
applicant to first
respondent.
2. Interest on
the aforesaid judgment amounts (clause 1.1 to clause 1.2 inclusive)
from 9
th
of June 2021 until date of payment, both days
inclusive at the prime rate of the applicant from time to time, plus
one per cent
until date of payment, both days inclusive.
3. The immovable
properties registered in the name of the first respondent, namely:-
3.1
ERF 4[…] ELDORAIGNE EXTENSION 40 TOWNSHIP HELD BY TITLE
DEED NUMBER T33541/2001 MEASURING 1123 (ONE THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED AND
TWENTY-THREE) SQUARE METRES
be declared executable in terms of
the provisions of Rule 46(1)(a)(ii) of the Uniform Rules of Court
read together with Rule 46A
(‘The Rules’);
3.2
ERF 2[…] SUNDERLAND RIDGE EXTENSION 1 TOWNSHIP HELD BY
TITLE DEED NUMBER T172192/2005 MEASURING 1500 (ONE THOUSAND FIVE
HUNDRED)
SQUARE METRES
be declared executable in terms of the
provisions of Rule 46(1)(a)(ii) of the Uniform Rules of Court read
together with Rule 46A
(‘The Rules’).
The Registrar
of the above Honourable Court be authorised and instructed to issue a
writ of execution against the immovable property
in respect of the
property referred to in the preceding paragraph.
4. The first,
second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth
respondents pay the costs of this application,
jointly and severally,
on the scale as between attorney and client, the one paying the other
to be absolved.
5.
Further and/or alternative relief.
”
The Facts
[8]
Crestar held a current
account with the bank under account number 1155-5011310-001 (“the
current account”).
[9]
The current account was
established subject to the following terms and conditions set out in
the Account Opening Application (“the
account mandate”)
and the terms and conditions signed on behalf of Crestar on 6 August
2018.
[10]
In terms of the facility
letter annexure “FA3 ”(couched in the form of an offer
dated 11 November 2019) and the annexures
thereto signed on behalf of
Crestar on 12 November 2019 (“the facility letter”), the
bank lent and advanced to Crestar,
by way of credit to the current
account, of:
10.1
R5 million on 24 February
2020, in respect of an overdraft facility; and
10.2
R5 034 935,94 on
3 July 2020, in respect of a term loan.
[11]
The bank was represented
by Chaudary Mohamed Qadeer Khan, the erstwhile branch manager of the
Laudium branch of the bank, and the
deponent to the founding
affidavit of the bank is Mr Qamar Farooq Ali. Crestar was represented
by second, third and fourth respondents,
all of them being members of
Crestar. It is alleged that their authority stems from a special
resolution passed by the members
of Crestar held at Johannesburg on
20 November 2019 annexed marked “FA4” I should point
out that annexure “FA4”
does not deal with Crestar but is
a special resolution passed by the members of Ghousbibi authorising
it to stand surety for the
obligations for Crestar and authorising Mr
Omar to sign the relevant suretyship. The correct annexure ultimately
surfaces in the
banks’s replying affidavit.
[12]
The loan facility already
referred to was to be repaid in 60 monthly instalments of R83 000.00
plus interest at the bank’s
prime rate of interest plus one per
cent from time to time. The rate of interest in respect of both the
overdraft facility and
the loan would be charged at the prime rate of
interest plus one per cent in respect of the facility amounts
afforded to Crestar.
The rate of interest charged on any or all
unauthorised access over the limits afforded in the banking accounts
of Crestar, respectively,
would be subject to the prime rate of
interest from time to time plus five per cent. In addition, the bank
reserved the right to
review the interest rates at its own discretion
from time to time.
[13]
Further terms and
conditions on the aforesaid transaction were as follows:
13.1
Crestar would ensure that
the credit turnover in the affiliate current accounts conducted by
Crestar and the fourth respondent,
respectively, would be
commensurate with the credit facility in each account, failing which
the bank would reconsider the continuation
of the facility;
13.2
the bank would charge its
normal banking charges from time to time, together with its legal
costs and service fees, together with
cash deposit fees, which were
subject to review.
[14]
The following securities
were also required:
14.1
a first covering mortgage
bond of R4 million registered over Erf 4[…] (No 1[…])
T[…] Street, E[…]
Township, E[…] Extension 40
(copies of the mortgage bond and title deed were annexed to the
founding affidavit as “FA5”
and “FA6”,
respectively). (“FA5” is in fact a surety bond and
contrary to Annexure “FA3” the
owners are Ahmed Hassan
Jaffer and Hawa Jaffer, the fourth and ninth respondents,
respectively – See however clause 12 of
the bond terms and
further);
14.2
a first covering mortgage
bond of R6 million registered over Erf 2[…] (No. 1[…])
R[…] Street, S[…]
Ridge Extension 1 Township, City of
Tshwane, Pretoria (copies of the mortgage bond and title deed were
also annexed to the founding
papers, as “FA7” and “FA8”,
respectively) (“FA7” is a surety bond – See however
clause
12 of the bond terms and further)
14.3
corporate surety of
Ghousbibi Arifullah CC (registration number 2004/026300/23) for an
amount of R6 million) (this document was
also annexed as annexure “FA
9.7”, dated 20/11/2019) (the signed document refers to the
debtor as Crestar represented
by Ikraam Jaffer, Salahhuddeen Jaffer
and Mrs Hawa Jaffer duly authorised by a resolution annexed thereto
as “R1” –
no such resolution is attached);
14.4
personal surety of Mr
Omar, for an amount of R6 million (this document is also annexed as
annexure “FA 9.6”, dated 15/11/2019
(the signed document
refers to the debtor as Crestar represented by Ikraam Jaffer,
Salahhuddeen Jaffer and Mrs Hawa Jaffer duly
authorised by a
resolution annexed thereto as “R1” – no such
resolution is attached);
14.5
unlimited personal surety
of Mr Ikraam Jaffer annexed marked “FA 9.1”, dated
12/11/2019 (the signed document refers
to the debtor as Crestar
represented by Ikraam Jaffer, Salahhuddeen Jaffer and Mrs Hawa Jaffer
duly authorised by a resolution
annexed thereto as “R1” –
no such resolution is attached);
14.6
unlimited personal surety
of Mr Salahhuddeen Jaffer annexed marked “FA 9.2”, dated
12/11/2019 (the signed document refers
to the debtor as Crestar
represented by Ikraam Jaffer, Salahhuddeen Jaffer and Mrs Hawa Jaffer
duly authorised by a resolution
annexed thereto as “R1” –
no such resolution is attached);
14.7
unlimited personal surety
of Mrs Hawa Jaffer, identity number 601201 0136 082 annexed
marked “FA 9.3”, dated
12/11/2019 (the signed document
refers to the debtor as Crestar represented by Ikraam Jaffer,
Salahhuddeen Jaffer and Mrs Hawa
Jaffer duly authorised by a
resolution annexed thereto as “R1” – no such
resolution is attached);
14.8
unlimited personal surety
of Tanwir Jaffer, identity number 890929 0085 087 annexed
marked “FA 9.4”, dated
12/11/2019 (the signed document
refers to the debtor as Crestar represented by Ikraam Jaffer,
Salahhuddeen Jaffer and Mrs Hawa
Jaffer duly authorised by a
resolution annexed thereto as “R1” – no such
resolution is attached); and
14.9
unlimited corporate surety
of the Ahmed Jaffer Family Trust (IT13346/07) annexed marked “FA
9.5”, dated 12/11/2019 (the
signed document refers to the
debtor as Crestar represented by Ikraam Jaffer, Salahhuddeen Jaffer
and Mrs Hawa Jaffer duly authorised
by a resolution annexed thereto
as “R1” – no such resolution is attached);
14.10
unlimited personal surety
of Ahmed Hassan Jaffer annexed marked “FA 9.8”, dated
12/11/2019 (the signed document refers
to the debtor as Crestar
represented by Ikraam Jaffer, Salahhuddeen Jaffer and Mrs Hawa Jaffer
duly authorised by a resolution
annexed thereto as “R1” –
no such resolution is attached)
[15]
It is alleged that
annexure “A” to annexure “FA3” specifically
informed Crestar as follows:
15.1
the facilities outstanding
at any one time are subject to variation by the applicant by way of
increase of decrease at the applicant’s
sole discretion,
without any notice to Crestar;
15.2
Crestar must maintain, if
the bank requires it at any time to do so, such margin as the bank
may from time to time require over
the overdrawn amounts of the
facility limit referred to by way of:
15.2.1
either the deposit of cash
or such other property as the bank may consider acceptable, such
deposits to be secured in the bank’s
favour and such documents
as the Bank may require from time to time; or
15.2.2
the creation in favour of
the bank of such security interest that the bank may require over
such property it considers as acceptable;
15.3
Crestar must execute, or
procure the execution of, such documents as the bank may require to
create such security interest;
15.4
Crestar authorises the
bank at any time to set off any credit balance to which they are
entitled on any account held with the bank
against all or part of the
overdrawn amount or interest accrued thereon;
15.5
repayment of all/or part
of the overdrawn amount and payment of interest will be due and
payable by Crestar on demand;
15.6
the facility may be
terminated by the bank at any time if Crestar fails to make payments
to the bank of any sum outstanding from
it on demand, or otherwise
commit a breach of the agreement arising out of the acceptance of the
offer contained in the facility
letter of any documents mentioned in
15.3 above;
15.7
in the event interest has
not been paid within 14 days of the date at which it becomes due for
payment, the whole of the outstanding
balance of the account plus
interest and charges will immediately become repayable without the
bank having to make a demand for
same;
15.8
all legal charges incurred
by the bank in connection with the facility;
15.9
joint and several liability
:
in the event that the addressee(s) of the letter dated 11 November
2019 (annexure “FA3”) comprises more than
one person, the
obligations imposed on the addressee(s) by the acceptance of the
offer of this letter shall be joint and several
obligations of each
such person and references to “you” and “your”
shall be treated as references to any
and all of such persons and the
addresses;
15.10
exercise of rights:
15.10.1
no failure or delay on the
bank’s part in exercising any right, power or privilege
hereunder shall operate as a waiver thereof,
nor shall any single or
partial exercise of any right, power or privilege hereunder preclude
any other or further exercise thereof
of any other right, power or
privilege. The rights and remedies herein expressly specified are
accumulative and not exclusive of
any rights or remedies which the
bank would otherwise have;
15.10.2
Crestar is required to
submit the latest financial statements of the company and the latest
network statements of the surety/ies
within a reasonable period from
the end of the financial year, failing which the bank reserves the
right to recall the facility
(until) such time (as) the financials
and network statements are submitted and are found to be
satisfactory.
[16]
The individual deeds of
suretyship as called for in annexure “FA3” were executed
by the second, third, fourth, fifth,
sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth
respondents. The respective deeds of suretyship contain,
inter
alia
, the following
terms:
16.1
The second to sixth
respondent and ninth bound themselves as surety
in
solidum
for, and as
co-principal debtors jointly with, Crestar in favour of the bank for
the due and punctual payment by Crestar of all
or any monies which
Crestar owed to the bank from time to time, from whatsoever cause and
howsoever arising as is evident from
annexures “FA 9.1” –
“FA 9.6”and “FA 9.8” in an unlimited amount.
16.2
Mr Omar and Ghousbibi
bound themselves as surety
in
solidum
for, and as
co-principal debtor jointly with, Crestar in favour of the bank for
the due and punctual payment by Crestar, but only
up to a maximum
amount of R6 000 000.00 (six million rand) each, which
Crestar owed to the bank from time to time, from
whatsoever cause and
howsoever arising as is evident from “FA9.6” and “FA
9.7”
[17]
The further material terms
of the aforementioned deeds of suretyship include,
inter
alia
, that:
17.1
Clause 5: Renunciation
Respondents renounce the
legal benefits of the defences of excussion and division, cession of
action,
non causa debiti
,
errore calculi
and non
numeratae pecuniae
;
17.2
Clause 10: Certificate of amount owing
A certificate purporting
to be signed on behalf of the bank would be proof until the contrary
is proved of the balance owing by
the respondents and the fact that
it is due and payable and that the authority of the signatory and the
validity of the signature
need not be proved.
17.3
The bank prays that the
balance of the terms and conditions in the above suretyships be read
as if incorporated in its founding
affidavit.
[18]
On or about 6 August 2018,
Crestar granted an account mandate to the bank. A copy of the account
mandate is annexed marked “FA10”
(prior to annexure “FA3”
and contains the following terms:
18.1
in terms of the account
mandate, the bank was,
inter
alia
, authorised to:
18.1.1
open an account in the
name of Crestar;
18.1.2
debit to the account any
cheques or other orders, bills of exchange, promissory notes made on
behalf of Crestar, whether the account
was in credit or overdrawn, or
may have become overdrawn as a result of an instruction being carried
out;
18.1.3
honour any order to
withdraw any or all monies in the account;
18.1.4
act on any instructions
with regard to the account, whether in credit or overdraft, subject
thereto that the documents were signed
in accordance with the signing
instructions and by the authorised signatory of Crestar;
18.1.5
debit the account with
bank charges consistent with banking practice.
[19]
The material terms of the
mandate also included that, in the event that the account of Crestar
was in debit, the indebtedness of
Crestar would be determined and
proven by a written certificate signed by a manager of any branch of
the bank, which certificate
would, on production thereof, be binding
and be conclusive proof of the contents thereof and of the fact that
the amount so certified
is due and payable.
[20]
This account mandate
relates to account number 1[…].
[21]
The bank pleads that the
further terms hereof be incorporated as if specifically stated.
[22]
It is further alleged that
Crestar and the other respondents breached the facility agreement as
set out in paragraphs 25 –
31 of the founding affidavit. The
details of the breaches are dealt with below.
[23]
I should point out that
the two continuing covering surety mortgage bonds secure the
obligations of the fourth and ninth respondents
and that of Ghousbibi
in terms of their respective suretyships in favour of the bank. The
mortgage bonds in relation to the obligations
of:
23.1
the fourth and ninth
respondents is registered for the sum of R4 million over a
residential immovable property, which is alleged
to be the primary
residence of the fourth respondent (the Eldoraigne bond); and
23.2
Ghousbibi, is registered
over a commercial immovable property for the sum of R6 million
(Sunderland Ridge bond).
[24]
The bank, although it did
not comply with section 46A of the Uniform Rules of Court, seeks an
order declaring the fourth respondent’s
undivided half share in
the immovable property, covered by the Eldoraigne bond, and the
immovable property of Ghousbibi, encumbered
by the Sunderland Ridge
bond, to be declared specially executable.
Applicant’s case
[25]
The bank contended in its
heads of argument that the respondents have no cognisable case. All
the respondents contentions are allegedly
either unmeritorious
technical defences or procedural defences which are bad in law and
devoid of any substance or both.
[26]
In terms of a
counterapplication Crestar filed with its answering affidavit it
sought a stay of the present proceedings pending
a finalisation of
business rescue proceedings which were instituted without any mention
of Crestar’s indebtedness to the
bank and without service on
the bank at a time before the bank even instituted the present
application. In addition Crestar sought
a stay of the present
proceedings pending the finalisation of a debatement of account
between the business rescue practitioner
and the bank in respect of
Crestar’s overdraft and loan account with the bank.
[27]
In the meantime the
application for the appointment of a business rescue practitioner has
been dismissed. The content of the answering
affidavit contains no
content entitling Crestar to a debatement of account in respect of
the overdraft or the loan.
[28]
As far as the seventh
respondent is concerned, as at the time the applicant filed its heads
of argument there was no executrix appointed
as yet. I deal later
with the final stand of the seventh respondent. As pointed out
before, the seventh and eighth respondents
have filed a supplementary
affidavit and request that same may be admitted. I will consider this
affidavit and will deal with the
reasons why same should be admitted
below.
[29]
The ninth respondent was
cited as the executor of Ahmed Hassen Jaffer. At the time there was
an attorney who filed a notice to ostensibly
oppose, but at the date
of filing of the banks heads of argument, this attorney had not yet
responded to a rule 7(1) notice which
was served upon him on 21
October 2021. The bank seeks no order against the ninth respondent.
It would appear that the ninth respondent
is not properly cited.
[30]
Broadly, the applicant’s
submission is that the defences, as apparent from the answering
affidavits filed on behalf of the
respondents, are not cognisable
issues for determination. The allegations on which the respondents
purport to rely disclose no
defence to the relief sought by the bank
and amount to no more than technical defences or procedural defences,
which are either
bad in law or devoid of factual substance, or both.
[31]
It is submitted that the
institution of the counter application was no more than a stratagem
to delay finalisation of the bank’s
claim. In any event, by the
time that the matter came before me for hearing, Crestar was already
in liquidation and the issue became
moot.
[32]
It
is the bank’s position that the answering affidavit deposed to
by the second respondent on behalf of Crestar, the second
to sixth
respondent and ninth respondent
[1]
is replete with allegations that are irrelevant, scandalous or
vexatious. The bank did deliver notice of its intention to apply
that
that same be struck out but submitted that the matter can be heard
without the necessity of formally being struck out.
[33]
One of the defences raised
is that the Court has no jurisdiction to entertain the application
because none of the respondents reside
within the area of
jurisdiction and because the Master of the Pretoria Division is
seized with the administration of the ninth
respondents estate. The
bank’s counter hereto is that this court has concurrent
jurisdiction with the Pretoria seat. Hence
the aforesaid is of no
consequence.
[34]
In
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others v Mpongo and Others
[2]
it was held that a litigant can choose its forum where there is a
concurrency of divisions. If a litigant is dissatisfied with
such a
choice, he can in appropriate circumstances avail himself of the
procedural mechanisms in the rules and in the absence of
an abuse of
process, a court is obliged to hear the matter before it. I can see
no basis for an abuse of the right to have the
matter heard in the
Johannesburg division of Gauteng.
[35]
In the said answering
affidavit there is also a complaint raised to the effect that the
bank should have approached a magistrate’s
court for the relief
given the fact that the standard suretyship terms allows for same.
The High Court is a Court with inherent
jurisdiction and the bank is
entitled to approach it as of right. Whether this will have adverse
cost consequences given the most
recent amendments in the Uniform
Rules of Court as to counsels’ fees will be dealt with at the
end of this judgment.
[36]
In the circumstances the
jurisdictional challenge should be dismissed.
[37]
As to the business rescue
proceedings the bank made the following submissions. Unbeknown to the
bank the second respondent on 26
February 2021 (before the bank
issued proceedings in the present matter) approached the Pretoria
Division of the above Honourable
Court under case no 10129/2021 for
the appointment of a business rescue practitioner in respect of
Crestar. In the Crestar affidavit
it is alleged that a business
rescue practitioner was appointed who was in the process of preparing
of compiling a report for purposes
of the business rescue application
and he undertook to make it available to the court, if necessary.
[38]
The bank was not cited as
an interested party nor was it served on the bank. The bank was also
not notified thereof as an affected
person in the prescribed manner
or at all.
[39]
Mr Ikraam Jaffer in his
opposing affidavit filed on behalf of the second to sixth and ninth
respondents states that:
“
Due to the
proliferation of a plethora of litigation against the first
respondent, it may have been an oversight not having served
a copy of
the application on the applicant herein who was not regarded as a
creditor at the time.
”
[40]
Mr Ikraam Jaffer also
states that the bank already knew on 6 October 2021 of the business
rescue proceedings. There is no disclosure
as to who on half of the
bank knew or how such knowledge was conveyed.
[41]
How the bank could not be
regarded as a creditor and in the same breath it is contended that it
may have been an oversight not to
serve a copy of the application for
business rescue is beyond me. It appears to me that the second
respondent’s attempt to
obtain an order for business rescue was
an attempt to obtain the protection under the
section 133
of the
Companies’ Act 71 of 2008
and the bank was deliberately not
informed. I infer this from the peculiar wording in the extract
quoted above and the fact that
on 25 April 2022 the business rescue
application was dismissed with a punitive costs order.
[42]
Even if I am wrong in this
view the fact remains that no application for business rescue was
granted and although the issue of such
application may have caused a
temporary stay of these proceedings, or even temporarily stultified
these proceedings, or even prevented
the issuance of these proceeding
there is no bar to granting the relief sought. The notion that the
present proceedings should
be reissued afresh is nonsensical and
overly formalistic. It will also prolong justice being done to all
the interested parties.
[43]
According to the bank
during the engagements between the parties leading up the institution
of these proceeding application no mention
was made of the business
rescue proceedings. The bank allegedly only became aware of the
business rescue proceedings on 15 March
2022 when the first to sixth
respondents filed their answering affidavits (the second respondents
affidavit is dated 14 March 2022).
It is alleged that subsequent
thereto and on 21 April 2022, the second respondent surreptiously
enrolled the business rescue application
as an urgent application.
The notice of amendment to the notice of motion in the business
rescue application in which he sought
that the matter be treated as
one of urgency was not served on the bank and the bank was not
notified by either the second
respondent or by any
of the other representatives of Crestar of the urgent proceedings.
[44]
Some of the respondents
has also suggested that the bank has not established its
locus
standi
and its status
as a registered bank and credit provider in terms of the
National
Credit Act 24 of 2005
has been called into question. It specifically
pleaded in its founding affidavit that it has such status. When
challenged it produced
the relevant documentation in its replying
affidavit.
[45]
It was submitted that same
is a frivolous allegation made by such respondents to distract one
from the fact that they have no defence
against the relief sought .
The documentary evidence the bank provided in response to the
allegations in the Crestar affidavit
demonstrates that the bank was
incorporated as a public company on 1 August 1990, was registered as
a bank and held a valid licence
to conduct business as a bank in
terns of the Bank’s Act 94 of 1990 and as a credit provider in
terms of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
[46]
A lot was made of the fact
that Annexure “FA4” was the incorrect document to the
extent that it is a special resolution
adopted by the eighth
respondent. In answer to Crestar’s and the other respondents
counterapplication Mr Goolam Muhamed Hassan
deposed to the bank’s
replying affidavit which also constitutes the answering affidavit to
the first to seventh and ninth
respondents (defined as the principal
respondents) counterapplication and explained that annexure “RA3”
to his answering
affidavit is actually what should have been annexed
as Annexure “FA4” Annexure “RA3” is in fact
the special
resolution adopted by Crestar represented by Mr Ikraam
Jaffer, Mr Salahhuddeen Jaffer and Mr Hawa Jaffer.
[47]
He denies that the bank
was aware of the application for business rescue and points out that
Crestar’s representatives in
the run up to the launch of the
present application never made reference thereto, In any event this
application was dismissed as
is evident from annexure “RA1”
to the aforesaid affidavit. I point out that the court dismissed same
with attorney
and client costs against Mr Ikraam Jaffer, the second
respondent in the present matter.
[48]
It is clear that to the
extent that Mr Ikraam Jaffer in his answering affidavit relied on the
appointment of a business rescue manager
and that post-commencement
finance was made available, same became moot. Notice was given that
costs
de bonis propriis
will be sought against Crestar’s attorney jointly and severally
with the costs order that will be sought against the respondents.
I
do not believe that such an order is warranted.
[49]
The fifth respondent had
withdrawn her notice of opposition on the basis that the letters
“POA“ indicated the use of
a power of attorney and until
such time as same is produced by the bank she does not oppose the
application. Mr Hassan has indicated
that these letters have nothing
to do with her liability and that it is indeed her signature that
appears on annexure “FA3”
and on her personal suretyship,
annexure “FA9.4”. He also explained that the absence of
her signature on annexure “FA4”
is not important given
that she is not a member of Crestar.
[50]
He has also indicated that
to the extent that she is in wilful default an order will be taken
against her.
[51]
He confirmed that the
trust represented by the sixth respondent executed the sixth
respondent’s suretyship annexed as “FA
9.5” to the
founding affidavit on 12 November 2019. This suretyship was signed by
Ikraam Jaffer duly authorized in terms
of the trust respondents’
resolution, annexure “RA2” to the bank’s replying
affidavit, the trust respondents
being the sixth, tenth, eleventh and
twelfth respondents who nominally represents the Ahmed Jaffer Family
Trust. The second respondent
did allege that there is no basis for
the joinder of the tenth, eleventh and twelfth respondents but it is
self – evident
that the trust cannot be cited in any litigation
without all the trustees being before the court in their capacities’
as
trustees. The latter respondents was eventually joined on 21 April
2022.
[52]
The
answering affidavit of Crestar also contained criticism to the effect
that
rule 41A
was not complied with. This is of no assistance.
[3]
[53]
There was also a complaint
by the fourth respondent who is owner of an undivided half share of
the property jointly registered in
her name and that of the late Mr
Jaffer (the ninth respondent) and that the bank has not complied with
Rule 46A of the Uniform
Rules of Court. The bank’s answer
hereto is that the requisite information falls within her specific
knowledge and that she
proffered no alternatives to discharge her
obligations under the suretyship, other than the execution against
the property and
she also did not provide the names of any other
persons who will be affected by such an order of execution.
[54]
She is alleged to be a
businesswoman who actively participates in the day to day management
of a large business operation. No facts
have been put forward in
Crestar’s affidavit (or hers) that she would be rendered
homeless in consequence of execution by
the bank based on the
mortgage bond registered over the property.
[55]
Mr Hassan on behalf of the
bank also annexed a valuation report of the property as annexure
“RA5” dated 9 October 2019.
This places the market value
at R6 000 000.00 and the forced sale value at
R3 600 000.00. Its saleability and
lease-ability is
classified as good according to DMK valuators as represented by Mr
M.S. Pillay. There is no affidavit filed by
Mr Pillay and the
valuation is nearly 5 years old.
[56]
I should mention that an
affidavit was filed by the eighth respondent represented by its
member Naadira Sheik Omar dated 5 July
2022 raising
inter
alia
the defence of
non-joinder of all the trustees of the sixth respondent and an oral
release of the seventh and eight respondents
from their suretyships.
She also denied that the bank is the registered holder of the
mortgage bond annexure “FA7”
registered over the property
of the eighth respondent. She further alleged that the suretyship
involved is void for vagueness because
it does not state whether it
refers to the overdraft or the loan. I do not deal with this
affidavit in any detail further given
that she did not persist with
these defences. This affidavit was in any event largely superseded by
the supplementary affidavit
dealt with below.
[57]
Mr Hassan also deals with
the eighth respondent’s property referred to which is a
commercial property. He states that the
bank is not subject to Rule
46A in respect of this property. He also annexes a valuation report
in respect of this property also
performed by Mr M.S. Pillay of DMK
Valuators giving a valuation as at 9 October 2019 with a comparable
market value of R 10 180 000.00
and a forced sale value of
R7 126 000.00. This commercial property is situate at Sunderland
Ridge Ext 1, Sunderland Industrial.
[58]
Mr Hassan denies that
there was ever an agreement to release the eighth respondent from its
surety obligations. In any event clause
12 and 13 of the mortgage
agreement and clause 15 of the suretyship agreement would render such
an oral agreement of no force and
effect.
[59]
On 2 June 2023 the seventh
respondent filed an answering affidavit in her capacity as executrix
of the estate late Sheik Hassan
Omar. In this affidavit she attacks
the validity of the suretyship on numerous grounds. These defences
were not argued before me
but effectively abandoned by reliance on
the suretyship of the seventh and eighth respondents coupled with an
admission of the
debt Crestar incurred with the bank. As will
transpire below the emphasis was ultimately on the defence of set-off
in respect of
the seventh and eighth respondents’ affidavits
filed on 10 May 2024. I will thus not deal with the defences raised
in the
2 June 2023 affidavit. The bank filed a replying affidavit
deposed to by Mr Hassan dealing with the seventh respondent’s
allegations. Certain aspects of this relying affidavit bears
mentioning.
[60]
He points out that the
deceased’s former attorneys delivered a notice of intention to
oppose the matter as far back as 20
August 2021 and that the
answering affidavit was due by 10 September 2021. Despite the passage
of time the deceased did not file
any affidavit before his passing on
1 January 2022. The executrix was appointed as such in the deceased’s
estate on 8 April
2022 as is clear from annexure “RA1”
annexed to the bank’s replying affidavit.
[61]
I will now deal with the
application for leave to file a supplementary affidavit, launched by
the seventh and eighth respondents
on 10 May 2024, which affidavit
was deposed to by the aforesaid Naadira Sheik Omar and confirmed by
her mother Rashida Omar (“the
executrix”). As stated in
her earlier affidavit she is the daughter of the late Mr Omar, and
also a member of Ghousbibi.
Mr Omar and Ghousbibi were also
represented by different attorneys than the other respondents by the
time this matter came
before me.
[62]
In this supplementary
affidavit the seventh and eighth respondents change tack and now no
longer dispute the claim of the bank against
Crestar and address the
fact that:
62.1
the Mr Omar and Ghousbibi
were depositors with the bank and at all material times had
liquidated claims in respect of their deposits
against the bank;
62.2
the terms on which the
bank accounts were conducted expressly provide for set-off if the
seventh and eighth respondents were indebted
to the bank;
62.3
accordingly, prior to its
liquidation, the bank, on the one hand, Mr Omar and Ghousbibi, on the
other, were mutually indebted to
each other and the debts were thus
liquidated and fully due. Hence, it was argued that set-off operated
automatically and, by operation
of law, prior to the commencement of
the liquidation, even if the bank did not give effect thereto through
its accounting on the
bank statements, such set-off should
pro
tanto
take place for
any claim that may exist between the bank, and Mr Omar and Ghousbibi,
as sureties and co-principal debtors. Each
claim will however have to
be subjected to the R6 milllion limit applicable to each suretyship.
[63]
This affidavit was only
filed on 10 May 2024 shortly before the hearing of the matter. The
reasons why I should admit the application
for leave to supplement
were given as follows:
63.1
that, in December 2023,
the executrix and Ghousbibi were confronted with applications to
compel delivery of their heads of argument;
63.2
that a provisional
liquidation order in respect of the bank had been granted and the
return day for the final order was only set
for 22 January 2024;
63.3
that, in the
circumstances, the deponent’s mother, the executrix to the
estate of the deponent’s late father, deposed
to an affidavit
on 11 December 2023 and indicated that they were, at the time,
considering raising two further defence i e
the defence of
set-off and the defence of rectification.
63.4
Based on the advice
received up to that stage, she was of the view that set-off could
only operate if the final liquidation order
against the bank was
refused. The new advice it obtained since was that this is incorrect.
63.5
It was, asserted that the
aforesaid advice was based on the wrong assumption i.e that the
executrix and Ghousbibi should await the
outcome of a hearing in
respect of the liquidation of the bank to assess whether the defence
of set-off may be viable or not.
63.6
Orders were thereafter
obtained to compel the executrix and Ghousbibi to file their heads of
argument.
63.7
Both the above orders
contained a so-called “drop dead” date of 7 February
2024, by which time the heads of argument
should be filed and, as it
transpired, the final order of liquidation against the bank was only
granted on 26 February 2024, as
appears from the judgment annexed to
the supplementary affidavit, “NSO1”.
63.8
Nevertheless, the excutrix
and Ghousbibi delivered heads after a short extension on 9 February
2024.
63.9
Senior counsel was
unavailable to settle the heads of argument and, although his name
appears on the heads of argument, this was
erroneous and he played no
role in the preparation thereof.
63.10
Prior to the supplementary
affidavit, and in order to try and ascertain whether the defence of
set-off may be viable, the seventh
and eighth respondents were
advised that they needed more information as to the form of the
contractual documents to ascertain
what their terms and conditions
were and also how much money was in each account at each stage.
63.11
For this purpose a notice
were delivered under Rule 35(13) and (14) on 15 January 2024.
This notice requested all the contractual
documents between the
seventh and the eighth respondents, on the one hand, and the bank, on
the other, and all the statements of
account reflecting all debits
and credits and running balances for each of the banking accounts for
the past 36 months. A copy
of such notice is annexed to the
supplementary affidavit as “NSO2”.
63.12
On 2 February 2024, the
bank’s attorneys responded to the Rule 35 notice and no
supplementary affidavit was delivered at the
time as to the status of
the winding up of the bank. Based on earlier advice, after the final
winding up order was granted on 26
February 2024 against the bank,
the executrix and Ghousbibi respondents were of the view that the
set-off defence was no longer
viable.
63.13
After junior counsel was
reappointed and drafted an affidavit for further consideration by 24
April 2024, accompanied with pessimistic
advice, a consultation was
arranged with senior counsel who had earlier been involved in the
matter and it was only on 2 May 2024
that he was requested for his
final advice as to whether the seventh and eighth respondents should
continue to oppose the application.
He required further instructions
and information and that was only provided to him on Friday 3 May
2024.
63.14
Under the aforesaid
circumstances, senior counsel undertook to consider all the papers in
the matter and the legal position and
thereafter advise whether any
defence of set-off could still be raised. It is alleged that the task
was extensive and, the papers
in the matter being voluminous, further
intermittent requests were made to obtain further instructions as to
the relationship and
background whilst senior counsel considered the
legal position. He also had to undertake extensive legal research,
which was interrupted
due to the fact that, in the week of 6 May
2024, he was briefed for a two-week arbitration for the week
commencing 30 May
2024, which he also had to prepare for.
Although it was initially unlikely that he would be available to
argue the matter, the
same senior counsel was approached in order to
save costs.
63.15
One of the reasons for
caution was that the seventh and eighth respondents were reluctant to
throw good money after bad if there
were no prospects of success. It
was submitted that the deponent’s late father had agreed to
sign surety for Crestar on the
back of a relationship with his
brother-in-law, who was the erstwhile chairman of KPMG. His nephews
and the deponent’s cousins
were the ones running the business.
In support hereof, annexure “NSO4” was annexed, being an
article which apparently
appeared in a magazine styled CFO South
Africa.
63.16
Paragraphs 4.25 and 4.26
of the supplementary affidavit demonstrate that the deponent’s
father were already seeking his release
from the suretyships on 11
May 2021. The effect of Covid-19 on the family business must have
been known to him and its reasonable
to infer that his efforts to get
himself and Ghousbibi released from their suretyships were predicated
on the increased risk. It
is clear that he knew that the family
business was not flourishing after Covid -19.
63.17
He passed away on 1
January according to Ghousbibi’s answering affidavit referred
to above and by 5 July 2022 no executor
in the seventh respondent’s
estate was as yet appointed.
63.18
It was further alleged
that the deponent’s late father had a longstanding relationship
with various role players in the bank.
He kept many millions of rands
with the bank. In the end, he obviously agreed to sign as surety and
commit the eighth respondent
as surety based on trust: trust in the
family, trust with the bank, that it would treat him fairly,
especially in light of the
fact that he had millions of rands
deposited with the bank.
63.19
It is also alleged that,
as Covid-19 appeared, the business of Crestar took a turn for the
worse. It is alleged, by the deponent,
that her late father was
seeking to have Ghousbibi released from its obligations as a surety.
It is suggested that he was also
trying to have his own suretyship
released. In the present affidavit she accepts that the statement in
paragraph 20.2 of Ghousbibi’s
answering affidavit that an oral
agreement was reached that he would be released cannot be supported.
Nevertheless, it was stated
that it was her father’s intention.
Be that as it may, the deponent’s late father and Ghousbibi
continued to bank with
the bank and, at all times, held funds well in
excess of the indebtedness of Crestar with the bank in respect of
bank accounts.
63.20
Not only did Crestar’s
business go from bad to worse, but so did the business of the bank
and, hence, on 26 March 2023 the
Minister of Finance, on the
recommendation from the Prudential Authority at the SA Reserve Bank,
placed the bank under curatorship.
63.21
From that point onwards,
no funds have been withdrawn from these accounts. As already stated,
the bank has since gone into liquidation.
63.22
At present, all that has
been repaid to depositors is R100 000.00 per depositor. It was
submitted that if the bank was granted
an order in the terms it
seeks, without applying set-off, the estate of the deponent’s
late father and that of Ghousbibi
will be severely prejudiced and
that it could indeed lead to the demise of Ghousbibi’s business
and have a prejudicial effect
on its creditors and the heirs of the
seventh respondent.
63.23
It is for that reason that
senior counsel was consulted and clarity sought as to whether the
defence of set-off had any merit. On
Thursday 9 May 2024, senior
counsel had already concluded that they had good prospects of success
in succeeding with the argument
relying on set-off and, hence, the
affidavit was filed on 10 May 2024. It was also submitted that the
evidence introduced was relatively
limited and should effectively be
common cause because the information is in the knowledge of the bank
(the bank being the source
thereof) and that the evidence only
relates to the balances of the accounts held with the bank by the
deponent’s late father
and, thereafter, his estate and
Ghousbibi, and the terms and conditions of their contracts. Hence, it
is submitted that the primary
argument is one of set-off and that it
would follow from the common cause evidence.
63.24
It was further submitted
that the balance of prejudice clearly favours permitting the evidence
and allowing the legal arguments
to be raised and which are indeed
permitted.
63.25
It was also submitted that
section 359 of the Companies Act 61 of 1973 (the Act) became
applicable after the final liquidation of
the bank and that no notice
had been provided in terms of section 359 and given that Mr Zeenath
Kajee had not yet been appointed
as final liquidator the litigation
could not proceed.
63.26
In addition it is alleged
that it
appears
as if no notice was given to the final liquidators of Crestar in
terms of the Act and hence the proceedings against Crestar are
deemed
to be abandoned unless the Court orders otherwise.
63.27
It was, therefore,
submitted that the bank has suffered no prejudice since it already
has the seventh and eighth respondents’
money and the seventh
and eighth respondents will suffer irreparable prejudice if they are
not afforded the opportunity of raising
a sound defence to the claim
and allowing the substantial sums of money held by the bank to be set
off against its claim against
the seventh and eighth respondents.
63.28
It was also pointed out
that, should judgment be granted against Ghousbibi, the consequence
thereof would be that it will also lose
its business premises and, in
this context, it was pointed out to me that it employs 102 people.
Hence, it was submitted that even
should the matter be postponed as a
consequence of the admission of the supplementary affidavit the
“healing balm”
of a costs order would cure any prejudice
suffered by the bank.
63.29
It should be noted that
the supplementary answering affidavit also serves as a founding
affidavit in respect of a counterapplication
to the extent necessary.
No further affidavits answering this counterapplication were filed
and no opportunity to do so was sought
by the bank.
The set-off
[64]
Ghousbibi opened a current
account with the bank in May 2006 under account number 1[…].
An account opening form is attached
in support hereof marked “NSO
5” The balances from time to time in this account are set out
in the statements marked
“NSO 6A” and “NSO 6B”,
which statements were obtained from the bank.
[65]
On the date of
commencement of the application on 26 July 2021 the bank owed
Ghousbibi R3 751 048.78 on account 2[…]
and at the
date of the commencement of the curatorship of the bank on 26 March
2023, the bank owed Ghousbibi R 7 305 955.49
on account
1[…]. After the curatorship Ghousbibi was unable to transact
on this account. It has also after the curatorship
been provided with
an additional account statement in respect of account 11551213202
reflecting a balance of R 12,464,557,00 as
at 15 March 2023 based on
an internal transfer. As at 1 February 2024 the latter account
reflected the amount of R12 868,851.88
as appears from “NSO
6C”
[66]
No opening documentation
in respect of the accounts held by the seventh respondent was
disclosed under the Rule 35 reply by the
bank and hence the deponent
assumes same was lost.
[67]
It is asserted that there
is no dispute that the late Mr Omar held four accounts with the bank.
No bank statements were provided
by the bank although the balances on
these accounts were provided as at 3 January 2022, 2 days after his
death (see the death certificate
annexed marked “NSO 7”).
The credit balances in these 4 accounts are as follows:
Account
number
R
1[...]
R627
781.31
1[..]
R590
754.22
1[...]
R2
347 374.49
1[...]
R6
000 000.00
Total
R9
565 910.02
[68]
The aforesaid figures are
based on an email sent by the bank to the deponent on 5 January 2022
marked “NSO 6”
[69]
On 18 January 2019, the
deponent’s late father signed the account opening terms and
conditions of the bank, which is annexed
as “NSO 9”. It
appears, from clause 13.13 of the terms and conditions, that the Bank
reserved its rights to amend the
terms and conditions and recorded
that such changes would be displayed on the notice board of the Bank
and on its official website.
Any amendments would be binding on the
depositors with immediate effect. Accordingly, these terms and
conditions would apply to
all of the seventh and eighth respondents’
accounts.
[70]
Clause 12 of these terms
and conditions deals with set-off and reads as follows:
“
12.1
You agree that the assets or funds in any of your Accounts and all
rights you may have against the Bank will be subject to
a first,
perfected, and prior
lien, security interest, and right of set-off and held
as security by the
bank for the discharge of any indebtedness or any
other obligation you
may have to the Bank, howsoever such obligation may have arisen.
12.2
In all instances of indebtedness, the assets in your Account will be
held by the Bank
as
security for payment of
any liability you may have. You agree to satisfy any indebtedness to
the Bank and pay any debit balances
in your Account on demand.’
12.3 The Bank will not
be liable to you for any losses that arise out of or related any such
transactions, including tax consequences
you may
face as a result of
such actions. In the event that the bank applies a
set-off of your assets
to satisfy any debt due and owing to the Bank,
the bank reserves the
right to restrict or close your Account, and to
seek payment of any
residual indebtedness through any legal means
possible, includlng
but not limited to, reporting such debt to credit agencies/bureaus."
[71]
It was submitted to me
that the bank intended that set-off should take place where amounts
were held as credit against any indebtedness
from any cause
whatsoever. It was further pointed out to me that set-off operates
automatically by operation of law and not because
of a plea of
set-off (once it is invoked).
[72]
Based on the notion that
the relationship between the bank and the client is that of a debtor
and a creditor, it was submitted that
a credit balance can be set off
against a debit balance on the basis of the debtor and creditor being
the same.
[73]
It was further submitted
that the purported dispute by Crestar does not mean that the debt was
not liquidated. The indebtedness
of Crestar to the bank was
demonstrated by a certificate of balance attached to the founding
affidavit and it is accordingly ascertainable
and capable of prompt
ascertainment by simply having regard to the bank account statement,
which was also attached to the founding
affidavit.
[74]
In the circumstances, it
was further submitted that the indebtedness of Crestar is clearly
liquidated and has been since the demands
and certainly by no later
than the date by which the application was launched. In terms of the
seventh and eighth respondents suretyships
“FA9.6” and
“FA 9.7” to the founding affidavit the seventh and eighth
respondents interpose and bound themselves
as sureties in solidum,
and as co-principal debtors, jointly with the first respondent, in
favour of the applicant in the sum of
R 6 million each. In terms of
clause 5.1 of each of the suretyships the seventh and eighth
respondents also renounced the benefit
of excussion meaning the bank
was entitled to sue for the full amount owing under the suretyship
without proceeding against the
first respondent.
[75]
It was thus submitted
there can be no dispute that as at the date of the demands, the date
of the institution of the application
and at worst the date of the
curatorship, the bank was indebted to the seventh and eighth
respondents in amounts exceeding the
indebtedness of the first
respondent. Each of the seventh and eighth respondents suretyships
were limited to R6 million.
[76]
On the basis that the
indebtedness of the bank was due and payable and clearly liquidated
and the indebtedness of Crestar was also
due and payable and
liquidated, it was argued that set-off had taken place by operation
of law and the indebtedness of Crestar
was thus extinguished. This
much is said in paragraph 32 of the affidavit. In order to achieve
this it would appear to me that
both Mr Omar’s and Ghousbibi’s
credit accounts might have to be utilised (the one or the other to
the maximum limit
of R6 million) to achieve this result.
[77]
It was also submitted that
that insofar as more detail is sought as to exactly what amounts were
set off when, the full bank accounts
have not been disclosed by the
bank despite the rule 35 notice and the Rule 35 reply. The seventh
and eighth respondents are simply
not in a position to provide
further particularity because they do not have all the accounts.
However it is clear that more than
R6 million was available in the
accounts at all material times.
[78]
It was further submitted
that the bank should know what each account was for. The point was
made that the account of R6 million
under account number
1155-3802248-250 looks suspiciously like it was being held as
security for the R6 million suretyship.
[79]
it was further argued that
even at the date of filing the supplementary affidavit there are more
than sufficient funds in the accounts
to extinguish the first
respondent's indebtedness for which the seventh and eighth
respondents have signed surety.
[80]
The bank’s claim as
per its latest draft order against Crestar (and the other
respondents), in terms of paragraph 1.1 is payment
in the amount of
R9,328,836.05 plus interest at the prime rate plus1 % and in terms of
paragraph 2.1 against the seventh and eighth
respondents the sum of
R6 million. All the aforesaid is claimed jointly and severally the
one paying the other to be excused. Although
it is so claimed in the
draft order (and somewhat differently in the prayer in the notice of
motion) it appears to me that the
effect of an automatic set-off will
have to operate on at least both the 7
th
and 8
th
respondents’ credit accounts.
[81]
It was submitted that the
sum of R6 million has been extinguished by set-off retrospectively to
the moment the mutuality of indebtedness
arose. This would have been
prior to the provisional liquidation of the bank and at the latest at
the date of the commencement
of the curatorship of the bank. The
reversion to an amount of only R6 million having been extinguished
contradicts the notion that
Crestar’s debt is extinguished. On
the basis that both the seventh and eighth respondents’
accounts were in credit
and each stood surety for R6 million the bank
would in my view obliged to apply set-off on each account until the
full extent of
Crestar’s debt is extinguished subject only to
this limitation that it is not entitled to exceed the R6million limit
in respect
of each suretyship.
[82]
With regard to the bank’s
curatorship it was submitted that it would be contrary to public
policy to not permit set-off in
circumstances such as the present
where the South African Reserve Bank was assuring depositors that
their funds were safe but where
they were not allowing funds to be
withdrawn. It was highlighted that the demise of the bank was due to
mismanagement. Reference
was made to Annexures NSO 10A and 10B, a
South African Reserve Bank media statement as well as a list of
questions and answers
pertaining to the reasons why the bank was
placed under curatorship. Suffice it to say that from the latter
annexures it is clear
to me that the word “mismanagement”
is an understatement.
[83]
It was further submitted
that even if the bank could argue that set-off did not take place
historically prior to the curatorship,
and even if it could prevent
set off by its election, which is denied, it is submitted that set
off would have to take place with
effect from the date of the
curatorship. This it was argued is because in terms of clause 12 of
the terms and conditions, even
if set-off did not take place, the
funds were being held as security.
[84]
It was further pleaded
that the seventh and eighth respondents cannot be prejudiced by the
bank’s conduct in failing to rely
upon such security. The
security is only bad as a result of the bank’s demise and going
into liquidation by reason of its
own mismanagement and it is deemed
to have appropriated the security in terms of its own terms and
conditions. I should mention
that an automatic set-off and the
realisation of a security are two different concepts. Realisation of
an amount ceded or pledged
as security is as a matter of law usually
achieved by
parate
executie
. The seventh
and eighth respondents are primarily invoking set-off as of 26 July
2021 when the bank launched these proceedings
and there is no
indication of parate executie.
[85]
It would also appear that
the aforesaid is based on the principle of law that nobody can
benefit from their own wrongdoing and to
permit the bank in the
circumstances of this case to claim the full indebtedness of the
seventh and eighth respondents as a result
of their suretyship
obligations whilst only paying them back a few cents in the Rand for
the deposits held with the bank, as is
likely to eventuate as a
result of the liquidation, is inherently unfair and contrary to
public policy.
[86]
The above submission was
backed up by reliance on section 25 of the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996
("the
Constitution")
as
it would allegedly amount to an arbitrary deprivation of property in
terms of section 25 (1) of the Constitution in as much as
"no
one may be deprived of property except in terms of law of general
application, and no law
may
permit arbitrary
deprivation of properly"
coupled
with the submission that to not permit set-off in the circumstances
of this case or to permit the bank to refuse to apply
set-off, which
would otherwise operate by operation of law, would amount to an
arbitrary deprivation of property. Insofar as any
law that would
purport to limit the seventh and eighth respondents rights in this
regard would not be reasonable and justifiable
in an open and
democratic society based on_human dignity, equality and freedom,
taking into account all relevant factors as set
out in section 36 (1)
of the Constitution.
[87]
The argument was further
bolstered by the submission that in terms of clause 12 of Annexure
“NSO 9”, styled “THE
HABIB OVERSEAS BANK LTD
ACCOUNT OPENING TERMS AND CONDITIONS” the credit balances
would, at worst, constitute perfected liens
in favour of the bank. It
was argued that it must act on such perfected security and cannot
wait for its own liquidation which
occurred due to mismanagement as
the Reserve Bank documents and the liquidation,application reveals to
the detriment of the seventh
and eighth respondents. In my view by
the time the bank fell into curatorship the automatic set-off of all
credit balances held
by the seventh and eighth against Crestar’s
debt respondents would already have taken place if set-off may be
relied upon.
[88]
The bank, as per annexures
"FA12" to "FA15.6" to the founding affidavit
began demanding payment from May 2021.
It was only provisionally
liquidated more than two years later in August 2023.
[89]
It was also submitted that
to the extent that the bank may allege that set-off was not
automatic, then it is contended that it was
negligent, if not grossly
negligent and reckless, in failing to have relied upon clause 12 of
its terms and conditions and in failing
to have given effect to the
set-off. It cannot benefit from such wrongdoing.
[90]
In addition it was
submitted that the seventh and eight respondent’s prejudice is
tangible in that the seventh and eighth
respondents would have to, in
effect, pay twice with the eighth respondent having to suffer the
sale of its immovable property
in order to settle such indebtedness
potentially leading to its demise.
[91]
In the result it is
pleaded, the bank’s application against the seventh and eighth
respondent should be dismissed, and to
the extent necessary, it
should be declared that the claim has been extinguished by set off.
Requirements for
set-off
[92]
The
requirements for set-off are trite. In
Schierhout
v Union Government (Minister of Justice)
[4]
it was held that :
“
The doctrine of
set-off with us is not derived from statute and regulated by rule of
court, as in England. It is a recognised principle
of our common law.
When two parties are mutually indebted to each other, both debts
being liquidated and fully due, then the doctrine
of compensation
comes into operation. The one debt extinguishes the other pro
tanto as effectually as if payment had
been made. Should one of
the creditors seek thereafter to enforce his claim, the defendant
would have to set up the defence of compensatio by
bringing
the facts to the notice of the Court as indeed the defence of payment
would also have to be pleaded and proved. But, compensation
once
established, the claim would be regarded as extinguished from the
moment the mutual debts were in existence together.
”
[93]
Where
one is dealing with a bank the situation should be approached by
understanding a few fundamentals first. A depositor in the
bank does
not own any deposit he may have made in the common law sense of the
word. The money having been deposited becomes the
property of the
bank.
[5]
[94]
The
essentials of set-off are discussed in Amler’s, Precedents of
Pleadings 9
th
edition as edition as follows:
[6]
94.1
The defendant must allege
and prove:
94.1.1
The
indebtedness of the plaintiff to the defendant;
94.1.2
That
the plaintiff’s debt to the defendant is due and payable;
94.1.3
that
both debts are liquidated;
94.1.4
that
the parties are indebted to each other, in the same capacity.
94.2
In the present matter the
bank owed the surety ( Mr Omar) and reserved to itself the right to
apply set-off. on its own terms. As
already stated above it reads as
follows:
“
12.1
You agree that the assets or funds in any of your Accounts and all
rights you may have against the Bank will be subject to
a first,
perfected, and prior lien,
security
interest, and right of set-off and held as security by the bank for
the discharge of any indebtedness or any other obligation
you may
have to the Bank, howsoever such obligation may have arisen.
12.2
In all instances
of indebtedness, the assets in your Account will be held by the Bank
as
security
for payment of any liability you may have. You agree to satisfy any
indebtedness to the Bank
and pay any debit
balances in your Account on demand.’
(my emphasis)
[95]
By
stipulating in such terms, the bank was in part repeating the common
law of automatic set-off and upfront sought to beef it up
as
to
a first, perfected, and prior lien, security interest, held as
security. Both Mr Omar and Ghousbibi in addition, agreed to satisfy
any indebtedness to the bank subject to the R6 million limitation in
respect of each surety. It should be noted that this regulated
the
deposits made by Mr Omar since 2006. The deponent being the daughter
of the executrix reconfirmed this position when she opened
the estate
account on behalf of the estate having been so empowered by the
executrix on 11 April 2022. The latter may be irrelevant
in as much
as the automatic set-off may well have extinguished Crestar’s
debt even before the estate account was opened.
[96]
As
I understand the common law in this regard the bank always has the
option to choose who it wants to hold liable. Once there has
been a
default by the (principal) debtor it is open to the bank in its
election to decide whether it acts on the security or only
sues the
(principal) debtor.
[7]
This
applies where there is a third party who provided a security deposit
(without
any other undertaking to pay the debt of the (principal) debtor)
.
Thus, the court held in the case referred to that the depositor of
the security in the insolvent bank may have to lodge a claim
in
insolvency to obtain repayment of the security.
[97]
The
argument raised by counsel for the executrix and Ghousbibi was that
Crestar having defaulted on its debt obligations, demand
having been
made on Mr Omar and Ghousbibi, the effect of their capped suretyships
coupled with the credit balances in the bank
read with the terms of
clause 12 of annexure “NSO9” produces a different result
i.e. the bank had to give effect to
the set-off prior to liquidation
(or even the curatorship) to the extent that the latter operates
automatically and on the basis
that the principal debt is liquidated
and so are the credit balances in Omar and Ghousbibi’s
accounts. This seems to be at
odds with the result in
BCCI
8.
The simple answer is that it is not at odds with same. In the present
matter Omar and Ghousbibi undertook to pay Crestar’s
debts in
terms of their capped suretyships jointly and severally. There is
authority for the notion that where a party is interposed
as surety
for the principal debtor the bank has no free choice once set-off is
invoked..
[8]
Lord Hoffman
explains the ostensible contradiction with regards to
Ms
Fashions
as follows:
“
But
because the depositor was also personally liable jointly and
severally with the borrower, an automatic set-off took place which
discharged the borrower. The distinction is artificial because in no
case would the bank wish to rely upon the depositor’s
personal
liability, whether as principal or guarantor. It will simply keep his
money in accordance with the letter of charge. It
could be said that,
for a bank which is thinking of becoming insolvent, the MS Fashions
case is a trap for the unwary”
[9]
[98]
Mr Peter for the bank
pointed out that regard should be had to the banking practice of
“sweeping” and clause 3 of annexure
“FA3 ”
which states as follows:
“
You
authorise us (without our being obliged to do so) at any time to
set-off any credit balance to which you are entitled on any
account
with us against all or part of the overdrawn amount or interest
accrued thereon.
”
[10]
[99]
The above clause operates
to negate set-off and allows in bank practice that payments due to a
bank on another account of a debtor
held with it, be sweeped and
utilised as a credit and consolidated with a debit balance in the
other account. This probably facilitated
the monthly payment on the
term loan account. The terms relied upon, however, apply to Crestar
and not to the seventh and eighth
respondents as sureties. No
affidavit as to the practice of sweeping of accounts were filed by
the bank in answer to the 10 May
2024 affidavit of the seventh and
eight respondent nor were an opportunity sought to file such an
affidavit. Once demand was made
the bank has staked its claim and in
my view the set-off occasioned by clause 12 in respect of the seventh
and eight respondents
account mandates’ should start running
utilising the credit balances held by them against the debt incurred
by Crestar.as
of 26 July 2021 at the latest, same being the date the
present proceedings was issued.
[100]
Over
and above the aforesaid it was alleged that the bank/curator were
negligent by not implementing clause 12.
[101]
It was also submitted
that:
[102]
“
38
In regard to the curatorship, I annex marked
"NS01A"
and
"NSO10B"
the
South
African Reserve Bank
Media Statement and Q & A documents reflecting the position. It
is submitted that it would be contrary
to public policy to not permit
set-off in circumstances such as the present where the South African
Reserve Bank was assuring depositors
that their funds were safe but
where they were not allowing funds to be withdrawn. They highlight
that the demise of the applicant
was due to mismanagement.
39.
Accordingly, even if the applicant could argue that set-off did not
take place historically prior to the curatorship, and even
if the
applicant could prevent set off by its election, which is denied, it
is submitted that set off would have to take place
with effect from
the date of the curatorship. This is because in terms of clause 12 of
the terms and conditions, even if set-off
did not take place, the
funds were being held as security.
”
[103]
This argument seems to be
constructed on the false premise that the bank “
is
deemed to already have appropriated the security in terms of its own
terms and conditions.
”
[104]
I can find no such deeming
provision in the relevant terms and conditions or in the suretyships.
The set-off may of course bring
about such a result. (See
MS
Fashions
fn 8)
[105]
In addition it is alleged
that the “security” is only bad because of curator’s
conduct in failing to rely upon
such “security”. In my
view the “security” formed part of the credit balances in
the various accounts which
was already subject to set-off prior to
the curator being appointed. The issue of security being realised
simply does not arise.
[106]
Annexure NSA 10A places
the reader on notice. The mismanagement of the bank is said to
predate the curatorship and the involvement
of the SA Reserve Bank in
its capacity as the Prudential Authority under the Habib Overseas
Bank will continue to operate during
the period of curatorship,
subject to the assessment of the curator. The curator will assume the
powers of the Board and management
and will make decisions regarding
the bank's continued granting of loans and sound banking activities
generally. The curator is
also required to recover and take
possession of all the assets of Habib Overseas Bank. Habib Overseas
Bank remains liquid, with
a liquidity coverage ratio above the
regulatory requirement, and there are no immediate concerns for
depositors, which means their
funds remain safe at the bank. The
curator will keep customers informed of any significant new
developments at the bank.
[107]
Annexure NSA10B the
question and answer annexure makes it clear beyond any doubt that the
bank was riddled by fraud and insider
trading. Any statement made by
the Prudential Authority at the stage the curator is appointed by
definition is based on the reports
the Reserve Bank received from the
bank. There is full disclosure that the systems migration was in a
mess and that the Auditors
could not perform their functions
properly. The notion that the bank is liquid is clearly based on the
information fed by the management
to the Prudential Authority prior
to the curatorship. In the context of the set-off taking place
earlier i.e. from 26 July 2024
all the curatorship details are
probably irrelevant.
[108]
The executrix’s
daughter made her election prior to the curatorship on 27 March 2023
to leave the funds of the seventh and
eight respondents there.
(Assuming any funds remained post set-off).This of course continued
to render the credit balances if any
remained, to be set-off against
the claims of the bank. In my view the set-off was by now already a
foregone conclusion and all
that may remain is a right to recover in
either the name of seventh respondent or eight respondent (depending
which entity has
a credit balance post the set-off) and the obvious
right to recover will be in the bank’s insolvency.
[109]
I am of the view that It
would appear that the automatic set-off would by now have already
extinguished Crestar’s debt and
that the issue of security is a
matter of history.
[110]
A further point which was
raised was that to not hold that the debt has been settled is an
arbitrary deprivation of the seventh
and eighth respondent’s
property rights. Firstly the funds given as security became the
property of the bank. The rights
to the deposit constituting the
security was pledged to the bank. The contract with the bank gave
rise to the deprivation of the
respondents rights by virtue of clause
12 –a contract freely entered into by the seventh respondent
and Ghousbibi. There
is thus no room for the argument of an
“arbitrary deprivation”. In any event the set-off
argument renders this submission
completely superfluous.
[111]
There is actually no
formal counterclaim before me for set-off and only a prayer. I am not
in a position to calculate the set-off
balances precisely and given
the interest running on capital outstanding on the bank’s claim
the liquidators will have to
calculate the set-off on a running basis
against the bank’s claim at least from 26 July 2021 and the
seventh and eighth respondents
will only have any remaining liability
if the credit balances in their accounts do not extinguish the claim
of the bank (the set-off
can of course not exceed their individual
limits of R6million each.
‘
[112]
One other aspect should
still be dealt with i.e. whether section 359 of Act 61 of 1973 of the
old Companies Act operates as a bar
to the proceedings. It is clear
that the liquidators of the bank and that of Crestar both hold final
appointments. Section 359
(1) operates for a liquidator’s
benefit.
[113]
The section reads as
follows:
“
(1)
When the Court has made an order for the winding-up of a company or a
special resolution for the voluntary winding-up of a company
has been
registered in terms of section 200- (a) all civil proceedings by or
against the company concerned shall be suspended until
the
appointment of a liquidator; and
”
(2)
(a) Every person who, having instituted legal proceedings against a
company which were suspended by a winding-up, intends to
continue the
same, and every person who intends to institute legal proceedings for
the purpose of enforcing any claim against the
company which arose
before the commencement of the winding-up, shall within four weeks
after the appointment of the liquidator
give the liquidator not less
than three weeks' notice in writing before continuing or commencing
the proceedings.
”
[114]
The commentary in
Henochsberg on the Companies Act with regard to section 359 (1)
states as follows:
“
The
suspension effected by s 359(1)(a) operates, in the case of a
voluntary winding-up, upon the registration of the special resolution
in terms of s 200 (s 359(1); and see eg, Corigrain Trading SA v
Resora (Pty) Ltd
2004 (2) SA 348
(W)), and, in the case of a
winding-up by the Court, only once a liquidation order has been
granted (and not merely upon the lodgement
of the application with
the Court) (LL Mining Corporation Ltd v Namco (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation)
2004 (3) SA 407
(C) at 413). The suspension operates
until the appointment of a liquidator; he would, however,
proceed at some peril to himself
as against the creditors of the
company if as soon as he is appointed he were to continue with the
proceedings without obtaining
authority as envisaged by s 386(3). But
the lack of such authority would not ground a valid objection by the
other party to the
proceedings to their continuation
”
[115]
As to section 359 (2) the
commentary states as follows:
A surety for the
company has no locus standi to invoke the provisions of sub-s (2)(a)
in order to avoid liability under a judgment
granted against the
company on the basis that the creditor had failed to comply with its
provisions (see, eg, Barlows Tractor case
supra at 884F-G;
Millman NO v Koetter
1993 (2) SA 749
(C); Nedcor Bank Ltd v
Samuel
2005 (2) SA 439
(W) at 441).
[116]
In the present matter the
liquidators of Crestar were substituted as parties in lieu of Crestar
as far back as 18 November 2022.
If section 359(2) found application
they could have raised it, given that same exists for their
protection and not the sureties
of Crestar. The seventh and eighth
respondents will thus not be able to rely on the above. With regards
to the liquidation of the
bank the liquidators proceeded and raised
no objection under section 359 (1) or (2) at all and specifically did
not file any answering
affidavit raising such defence against the
seventh and eight respondents’ prayer for set-off.
[117]
I now have regard to the
test for the admission of such a late supplementary affidavit.
[118]
A
court will exercise its discretion to permit the filing of further
affidavits against the backdrop of the fundamental consideration
that
a matter should be adjudicated upon all the facts relevant to the
issues in dispute. For this reliance was placed on Erasmus:
Superior
Court Practice.
[11]
I refer to
the most recent update available on the Jutastat Evolve product which
states as follows:
“
The factors
that the court will consider are the following:
(a) The reason
why the evidence was not produced timeously.
(b) The degree
of materiality of the evidence.
(c) The
possibility that it may have been shaped to ‘relieve the pinch
of the shoe’.
(d) The balance
of prejudice to the applicant if the application is refused and the
prejudice to the respondent if it is granted.
(e) The stage
which the particular litigation has reached. Where judgment has been
reserved after all the evidence has been
heard and, before judgment
is delivered, an applicant applies for leave to place further
evidence before the court, it may well
be that he will have a greater
burden because of factors such as the increased possibility of
prejudice to the respondent, the
need for finality, and the
undesirability of a reconsideration of the whole case, and perhaps
also the convenience of the court.
(f) The ‘healing
balm’ of an appropriate order as to costs.
(g) The general
need for finality in judicial proceedings.
(h)
The appropriateness, or otherwise, in all the circumstances, of
visiting the fault of the attorney upon the head of his
client.”
[119]
The defence of set-off
could hardly have been conducted without obtaining the necessary
documentation from the bank, Although it
is raised late the
complexity of the issues are such that I allow the late affidavit to
supplement the seventh and eight respondents
case. In fact given the
content of the new affidavit they have no case at all but the defence
of set-off.
[120]
Plaintiff’s
claim against the seventh and eighth respondents will have to be
dismissed to the extent that it is extinguished
by set-off. I am
unable to declare it fully extinguished hence the proviso. I will
deal with costs at the end of the matter.
The
case for the 1st to 6
th
and 10
th
to 12
th
respondents
.(“the
remaining respondents”)
[121]
The first defendant,
Crestar, initially opposed the matter and as already stated ended in
final liquidation on 5 May 2022 after
an unsuccessful business rescue
application.
[122]
Prior hereto on 15 March
2022 an affidavit was filed by Ikraam Jaffer by his attorneys Jaffer
Inc. c/o Chiba Jivan Attorneys in
Greenside on behalf of first to
sixth respondents and ninth respondent. He states that he is the
second respondent and a director
of the first respondent. He also
states that as a matter of convenience that he deposes to his
affidavit on behalf of the first
to
seventh
respondents and ninth respondent in the main application and the
tenth to twelfth respondents in the joinder application. I point
out
that to the extent that he purports to speak on behalf of the seventh
respondent that contradicts the filing page under cover
of which his
affidavit is filed and that a copy of his affidavit is actually
served on I Nieuwoudt Attorneys who at the time acted
for the seventh
and eighth respondents. Be that as it may the seventh and eighth
respondents have stated their position and prayer
as set out above.
[123]
His affidavit is
structured as follows:
“
7.1. I firstly
deal with the points in limine as it relates to the first
respondent in business
rescue and the applicant's failure to seek
permission from the
duly appointed business rescue practitioner, alternatively, leave
from the honourable court as mandated, inter
alia, in terms of
section 131
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
under case number
10129/21
in the Gauteng Division situate in Pretoria;
7.2. The security
tendered and held in trust by the first respondent’s business
rescue practitioner in lieu of the business
rescue proceedings;
7.3. The right and
entitlement of both the eighth and ninth respondents to intervene in
the application with leave of the Office
of the Master in Pretoria
under their duly authorised executors once the letters of
executorship with the requisite authority;
7.4. The jurisdiction
of the honourable court in the circumstances where the Office of the
Master situate in Pretoria is vested
with the deceased estates of the
estate late Ahmed Hassan Jaffer under Master's reference
005507
/2021;
7.5. The surety and
liability of the fifth respondent herein without the requisite power
of attorney, her liability and notice of
withdrawal pending the
lodgement of the power of attorney;
7.6. Opposition to the
joinder application to the extent necessary
as sought herein;
7.7. The answering
affidavit as it relates to the applicant's main
application;
7.8. The basis for a
Rule 7(1)
, Rule (35)(12)(a) and counter application in terms of
Rule
6(13)
together with an appropriate counter application for a
statement and debatement of the aforesaid account;
7.9.
The allegations as contained in the affidavits of Dassoo and the
eighth respondent's nominated official in the stead of the
deceased.
”
[124]
I refer to paragraphs 7.1
and 7.2 first. I have dealt with the business rescue application in
paragraph 34 to 46. There is no business
rescue practitioner or a
basis for debatement of the account and hence these defences fail. I
have considered that the bank may
well not have been entitled to
launch the proceedings against Crestar at the time, due to the
pending business rescue application,
but at present given that the
business rescue application was dismissed it would be artificial and
overly formalistic to order
the bank to reissue proceedings against
Crestar. The liquidators’ of Crestar did not appear or object
and the remaining respondent
as sureties have no standing to raise
the defence and could in any event have been sued irrespective of
whether a claim could be
launched against Crestar at the time.
[125]
The issue of the eight and
ninth respondent is raised in paragraph 7.3 above. Given that the
applicant no longer seeks relief against
the ninth respondent the
point is moot. The eighth respondent’s position and entitlement
to set-off has been dealt with above
and the second respondent as
surety has no say in Ghousbibi’s case as conducted by its
counsel.
[126]
I accept that the ninth
respondent is not properly cited and that no executor has been
appointed. Given the bank’s decision
to seek no relief against
the ninth respondent that is the end of the matter. The remaining
respondents and their attorney also
have no
locus
standi
to argue the
point.
[127]
The
fifth respondent cannot unilaterally withdraw from the matter based
on the sketchy allegation that the letters P.O.A. as a sidenote
on
Annexure “FA3” refers to a power of attorney. Mr Hassan
has dealt with that allegation in his replying affidavit.
If counsel
for the fifth respondent wanted to deal with this as a
bona
fide
factual dispute he should have sought a reference to evidence before
arguing the case and by arguing and not seeking a reference
to trial
or cross-examination thereon effectively placed me in a position
where I have to rule whether there is a triable defence
raised by
her. The fact that she did not take part in the business is of no
assistance and her suretyship stands.
[12]
If she wanted to dispute her signature, she should have engaged a
handwriting expert deposing to an affidavit that she never signed
it.
I am of the view that she raised no triable defence and should suffer
the consequences thereof.
[128]
An
allegation made by the second respondent to the effect that the fifth
respondent (Dr Tanwir Jaffer) was not a member of the trustees
that
authorised the second respondent to sign the Ahmed Jaffer Family
Trust suretyship - sixth respondent) is patently false.
[13]
.
I have checked the caselines reference given i.e. 3-21 and her
signature appears as one of the trustees authorising the second
respondent to sign a suretyship on behalf of the sixth respondent.
This resolution is dated 12 November 2019.
[129]
To the extent that the
joinder issue is raised by second respondent as a defence – I
assume he refers here to the joinder
of the tenth, eleventh and
twelfth respondents - it is a matter of same being a
fait
accomplit.
On 21 April
2022 the tenth– twelfth respondents were formally joined as
trustees for the time being of the Ahmed Jaffer Family
Trust, thus
ensuring the trust is properly before the court. In this regard to
the twelfth respondent’s attempt to waive
her rights to be
joined as trustee is ineffective since the trust can only be cited in
a court by all trustees acting jointly.
She is not entitled to
withdraw in her official capacity given that the trust will then not
be able to give instructions to its
attorneys on the basis of joint
decisions made by the trustees.
[130]
With regard to paragraph
7.7 which seems to deal with the defences raised as to the merits of
the bank’s claim I could found
nothing in second respondent’s
affidavit and thus the third, fourth, fifth and sixth respondents’
supporting affidavits
that amount to triable defences.
[131]
The
challenge to the deponent to the founding affidavit’s authority
to bring the proceedings is ill-conceived. Such a challenge
should be
brought under
rule 7
of the Uniform Rules of Court. An applicant in
motion proceedings is no longer required to attach a resolution as to
his authority.
[14]
[132]
The denials as to the
status of the bank and the fact that it is registered under the NCA
was refuted in reply by Mr Hassan.
[133]
The status of the ninth
respondent is of no consequence given that the Applicant is seeking
no relief against the as yet unidentified
ninth respondent. The
second respondent and his attorneys have for the same reasons no
authority to act for the ninth respondent.
[134]
I have already dealt with
the fifth respondent’s position.
[135]
The remaining respondents
admit the term loan and facility agreement and the securities
required for same.
[136]
They also admit the
contents of paragraph 17 of the founding affidavit and thus the terms
of Annexure “A” to Annexure
“FA3”. It is
pleaded that due to Covid -19 pandemic the requisite financial
statements could not be produced.
[137]
The second respondent
admits paragraph 18 pertaining to the suretyships required (repeating
the denial in respect of the fifth respondent)
together with the
balance of the remaining respondents. This admission includes
annexure “FA4” (the Ghousbibi resolution)
the correct
annexure “FA4” later being provided by Mr Hassan.
[138]
Second respondent also
admits para 19.1 – 19.6 of the founding affidavit i.e. the
suretyships signed by him, the third and
fourth respondents. The
third and fourth respondents take no issues with same.
[139]
He denies paragraphs 19.9
– 19.16 as well as annexures “FA 9.5” – “FA
9.8”. He complains of
sloppy copy and paste methods and insists
that the annexures “FA 9.5” – “FA 9.8”
should be struck
as irrelevant. No such application was argued by Mr
Kὃhn who appeared for the remaining respondents and the second
respondent
also demands a costs
de
bonis propriis
order
against the applicant’s attorneys. The effect of the sloppy
drafting and copy and pasting is that all the suretyships
he seeks to
strike out are supposed to be that of the fifth respondent when in
fact these annexures are the suretyships of the
sixth, seventh and
eighth respondents. Whilst I do not approve of the sloppy drafting
and incorrect identification of these suretyships
a simple reading of
same corrects any identification problems and neither the seventh or
eighth respondents complained about this.
I cannot entertain this
complaint. The remaining respondents know which suretyships pertain
to them and are not prejudiced by the
erroneous identification in the
founding affidavit.
[140]
The remaining respondents
also allege that the applicant’s attorney was indolent in other
respects in as much as an incomplete
set of papers were served and on
two other occasions the papers had to be supplemented before his
attorneys finally had a complete
set of papers. For this reason he
believes the respondents should have another opportunity to set a
version implying that fresh
papers should be served again. This was
argued by Mr Kὃhn coupled with the fact that the bank should
not have issued papers
whilst the business rescue application was
pending. As to the latter I have already stated my view. With regard
to the sloppy drafting
and incorrect identification of the parties
and their suretyships I do not believe that the remaining respondents
have been prejudiced
at all. As far as the first incomplete set of
papers are concerned the respondents were afforded a fresh period to
enter an appearance
and file affidavits. No additional accommodation
is required.
[141]
With regard to paragraphs
19.17 – 19.18 dealing with the terms of the suretyships the
second respondent denied the meaning
thereof and stated that same
will be dealt with once the court’s leave to rely on these
suretyships were obtained. In substance
it is only the Ahmed Jaffer
Family Trust suretyship that really affected the second to sixth
respondents. The other annexures involved
the seventh and eight
respondents who had no difficulty with these terms once the set-off
approach was followed. The ninth respondent
is a non-issue.
[142]
The remaining respondents
deny that the bank failed in full to provide the standard banking
practices it held out to provide and
failed to account in full to
Crestar’s directors. Save for the aforesaid paragraph 20-24 was
admitted. The latter deals with
the account mandate also known as “
An
account opening application
”.
[143]
The second to sixth
respondents answer here is vague to the extent that there is no
indication of what they were given and what
they were not given. As
far as the issue of accounting is concerned this has been dealt with.
There is no fiduciary relationship
between a bank and its clients,
and thus the bank has no duty to account.
[144]
Paragraphs 25-30 of the
bank’s founding affidavit deals with Crestar’s breaches
of the various terms and conditions
as well as its requests to bring
the account back within limits. From about the middle of 2020 the
credit turnover in Crestar’s
bank account had substantially
decreased and was not commensurate with the credit limit afforded to
it. Notwithstanding the aforesaid
and undertakings by the second and
third respondents that the credit turnover will be made commensurate
with the credit limit afforded
to Crestar the breaches continued. In
support hereof annexure “FA11” is annexed, being a
reconciliation statement reflecting
an analysis of Crestar’s
account which was not being conducted in a satisfactory manner. Mr
Ali also verbally informed second
and third respondent that it would
instruct its legal team to fully recover Crestar’s outstanding
liability to the bank.
[145]
In the ensuing months
despite Crestar’s assurance that it would extinguish its
liability to the bank, same not only increased
in excess of the
facility but Crestar failed to reduce the liability.
[146]
The bank also asserts in a
letter dated 11 May 2021 attached as annexure “FA12” that
Mr Omar wanted a release of the
Sunderland property and that Crestar
never responded hereto. According to the Founding Affidavit Crestar
was to provide a sustainable
replacement security. This never
happened. Seventh and eighth respondents accepted that neither were
ever released from their respective
suretyships.
[147]
In this letter repayment
of an amount of R 9 239 557,07 was demanded within 30 days of
the date of the letter or an arrangement
to provide alternate
security to cover its liabilities, failing which the bank would take
appropriate action.
[148]
The second respondence
response hereto was that in the bank’s conversations with him
and the third respondent the bank failed
to appropriately record
Crestar’s concerns as to business rescue proceedings and its
financial distress as a consequence
of the Covid 19 pandemic.
[149]
The second respondent also
alleges that Mr Ali was not the normal contact point of Crestar and
that Mr Ali conveniently fails to
enlighten the court of the various
telephone discussions with Crestar’s normal contact point
directly. I should mention that
the remaining respondents also do not
inform the court as to the identity of Crestar’s usual contact
point.
[150]
The second respondent also
alleges that the bank is not compliant with standard banking practice
in terms of the Banking legislation
applicable in South Africa. It is
unclear what this allegation seeks to convey.
[151]
The bank is challenged to
produce the purported undertakings referred to in paragraphs 26.2, 28
and 29 together with the assurances
referenced in paragraph 27 of the
founding affidavit. The bank never suggested that it had written
proof of same and thus the challenge
and counter application for same
is disingenuous.
[152]
I also find it
inconceivable given Crestar’s concerns about business rescue
that second respondent would thereafter forget
to include the bank as
a party in the business rescue proceedings. This lends support to the
assertion that the bank’s exclusion
was a stratagem.
[153]
The second respondent then
denies that annexure “FA11” is
not
a banking document or appropriately reconciled banking document. I am
not sure what this is supposed to mean. Annexure “FA11”
carefully demonstrates the continuous debits and excess with regard
to the overdraft limit of Crestar.
[154]
The bank thereafter
employed Dassoo Attorneys who demanded repayment of Crestar’s
liability within 48 hours as per annexure
“FA13” dated 10
June 2021 and also demanded repayment as per annexure “FA14.1”
from the second respondent
and trusting him to prevail on Crestar to
repay its liability to the bank forthwith. Similar demands were sent
to the third, fourth
and fifth respondents as sureties same being
Annexures “FA14.2” – “FA 14.4”
[155]
The second respondent
seems to think annexure “FA13” is directed to him rather
than to Crestar and annexure “FA14.1”
is directed to
Crestar.
[156]
The second respondent is
upset in as much as he regards the second letter as written in a
disrespectful tone in circumstances where
there is no intention of
the bank to indicate which steps it took to accommodate “
the
applicants
” in
relation to the business rescue proceedings and other pending
litigation. I presume the second respondent meant Crestar
should have
been accommodated notwithstanding the bank’s patience. The
notion that the bank should know about the business
rescue
proceedings and the repeated reference thereto seems contrived given
the earlier explanation that it was an oversight not
to include it in
the application for business rescue.
[157]
For some or other reason
the second respondent sees unreasonableness and malice in the demand
to pay before close of business the
next day given fact that the
credit facility is revoked and given Crestar’s inability to
plead the full circumstances of
its financial distress and the
failure of the bank and its attorney to take cognisance thereof, and
more specifically bearing in
mind that his father passed away as
recent as 3 February 2021.
[158]
It would appear that the
second respondent forgets Annexure “FA12” where Crestar
was afforded thirty days to respond
after 11 May 2021. The failure to
rectify the account is the obvious reason for the acceleration in the
process. In any event one
would have expected some correspondence
from Crestar or the second respondent explaining the distress and
alerting the bank about
a possible business rescue application.
[159]
The second respondent
accuses the bank of instituting this application without a proper
approach and without properly considering
to bring the correct
parties before the court or filing a peremptory
Rule 41A(2)(a).
I
have already dealt with the
Rule 41A
defence above. All the parties
except for the ninth respondent was correctly before the court by the
time I had to hear the matter.
[160]
He also complains that the
bank issued this application on 26 July 2021 after a further demand
on 15 June 2021 and unreasonable
demands on 17 June 2021. Again the
demand referred to was sent to the third fourth and fifth respondents
as sureties and to Crestar.
On this occasion the sixth, seventh and
eighth respondents also received similar demands.
[161]
All of the aforesaid is
referred to, is to demonstrate the bank’s “disrespect.”
[162]
In paragraph 30.1 a
reference is made to seventh and eighth respondents wishing to be
released from their respective suretyships
so that the property of
the ninth respondent (the Eldoraigne property) can be released from
the bond. This property was co-owned
by the fourth and ninth
respondents and subject to a surety bond pursuant to their respective
suretyships. It has nothing to do
with the seventh and eighth
respondents suretyships which Mr Omar wanted to be released from
which would have freed the Sunderland
property from the relevant
surety bond. This is borne out by Annexure “FA12”. The
reference to the Eldoraigne property
is probably just another example
of sloppy drafting.
[163]
Based on the content of
paragraph 30.1 of the founding affidavit the second respondent
concludes: ”….
that
the applicant has been interfering in the financial affairs of the
respondent and there exists no reason why the ninth respondent
could
have taking the release up with me or the third respondent.
”
[164]
I am of the view that the
inference drawn by the second respondent as to the bank’s
alleged interference is unsustainable.
[165]
He also accuses the bank
and its attorney of attempting to implicate cost at the door of the
“
respondent’s
”
for its own failures. Although it is stated that I was to be
addressed on this at the hearing I do not recall Mr Kὃhn
doing
so in this context.
[166]
The second respondent
further states:
“
I further deny
that the costs as alleged by the applicant is exorbitant and
inappropriately inflated. I do know that the applicant
in a number of
other cases have incorrectly calculated the interest, or
inappropriately included non-existent interest, and for
this reason
the balance, certificate of balance and any other document produced
by the applicant is challenged.
73.14. In light
hereof, I further seek a full statement and debatement of the account
with the applicant, should this not be possible,
such statement and
debatement be referred to the incumbent business rescue practitioner
to adjudicate and assist the first respondent
in such astronomical
alleged interest reflected in annexures
FA11
and
FA16.
73.15. To the extent
that applicant is able to prove[s] the purported
allegations as it
relates to the statement reconciliation and the amounts reflected in
the certificates of balance, and in order
to enable first respondent
and/or its duly appointed business rescue practitioner to ascertain
its alleged indebtedness to applicant,
first respondent seeks a
statement and debatement of the aforesaid alleged balance reflected
in the certificate of balance on the
following grounds:-
73.15.1. Applicant
alleges in terms of a written agreement that the first respondent is
entitled to receive invoices and statements;
73.15.2. Applicant has
a fiduciary relationship to account to first respondent in terms of
the alleged written agreement;
73.15.3. Applicant
alleges a contractual written agreement in support of its alleged
claim as contained in the certificate of balance;
73.15.4.
Applicant has failed, neglected or refused to account to the first
defendant in terms of the alleged agreement as it is
obliged to do
and should applicant fail to account for to the first respondent,
there is no liability in respect [of] any claim
as alleged
.”
[167]
Firstly
there is no business rescue practitioner to have a debate with.
Secondly and as stated before the banker’s relationship
with
his client is one of debtor and creditor.
[15]
There is no fiduciary relationship entitling a debatement of an
account arising out of contract, or a statutory provision
[16]
.
[168]
In addition the second to
sixth and tenth to twelfth respondents are bound by the terms of
their suretyships.
[169]
Mr Kὃhn argued that
as far as the Ahmed Jaffer Family Trust is concerned the letters
appointing the sixth, and tenth to twelfth
respondents were issued by
the Master in Pretoria and hence jurisdiction is there. The same
would have applied if the applicant
was still seeking relief against
the ninth respondent. As far as the Trust is concerned the sixth, and
tenth – twelfth respondents
are natural persons and the Gauteng
Division: Johannesburg has concurrent jurisdiction with the Gauteng
Division: Pretoria. This
is by now trite law and I therefore have to
disagree with him on this point. This court has jurisdiction over the
Trust as nominally
represented by the sixth, and tenth to twelfth
respondents. To the extent that I have to decide about its liability
as surety for
the debt of Crestar I may do so.
[170]
He
also argued that even if the applicant was unaware of business rescue
application it nevertheless issued the present application
while the
business rescue application was pending. Irrespective of the fact
that the business rescue failed the mere fact that
it was pending
prohibited the applicant from launching proceedings.
[17]
[171]
I
have already dealt with this and cannot conceive that the legislature
intended this to have effect where the applicant is unaware
of the
business rescue proceedings when the application is launched and
ultimately no business rescue is granted and the application
is
dismissed as was the case here. To suggest that on this basis
proceedings should be reissued and commence afresh is overly
formalistic and could not have been the intention of the legislature.
Given the aforesaid coupled with the failure to notify the
bank of
the application this defence has to be rejected if for no other
reason than the fact that it seems to have been brought
without
notifying the bank deliberately. I do not understand how the bank
could not have been regarded as a creditor by the second
respondent.
[18]
[172]
Another
ground was raised as to why proceedings should start afresh. It is
alleged that even after the applicant’s attorneys
served what
was believed to be a complete set of papers and allowed the time to
enter a notice to oppose to run afresh as well
as the time to file an
opposing affidavit, the application as re-served was still incomplete
in as much as the first page of the
surety bond registered against
the
Surety
Mortgage Bond No. 86348/2020 pertaining to the Eldoraigne property
was
not part of the application. When this was discovered and on 7
October 2021 the applicant’s attorney caused same to be
served
upon all the respondents.
[19]
Applicants counsel dealt with this point on the basis that if there
is any irregularity in the proceeding the proper course of
the
opposing party is not to proceed as if there is no such proceeding at
all but to notify the other side timeously that it is
required to
remedy the irregularity complained of.
[20]
I am in agreement with him. The remaining respondents conduct is
indicative of a deliberate failure to make use of the machinery
provided so as to orchestrate a delay. To suggest that for this
reason alone the whole application should commence afresh and that
after the respondents have filed their affidavits is idle.
[173]
A further argument put up
by Mr Kὃhn was that the applicant made his case in reply and
not in its founding affidavit. This
was based on several features i.a
that the bank did not attach proof that it was a registered bank
under the Bank’s Act and
registered credit provider under the
NCA. The founding affidavit of the bank contained the requisite
allegations and it was only
because of a denial hereof that Mr Hassan
referred thereto in the bank’s replying affidavit. Another
issue was that in the
founding affidavit annexure “FA4”
was the incorrect annexure and the correct one only surfaced in Mr
Hassan’s
reply as annexure “RA3”. This was a
special resolution passed by Crestar in terms of which it accepts the
offer by
the bank. The Ahmed Jaffer Trust could not bind itself as
surety for Crestar’s debt without a resolution adopted by all
the
trustees. This was annexed as annexure “RA2” and it
transpires from same that the second respondent was authorised to
sign the suretyship on behalf of the trust. As far as the dismissal
of the business rescue procedure is concerned the bank only
dealt
with it in the reply after it was raised as a defence by the second
to sixth and tenth to twelfth respondents and to some
extent by the
seventh and eighth respondents who no longer relied on same after
they changed tack and sought leave to file the
supplementary
affidavit in support of the set-off defence.
[174]
The bank also sought to
expand on the
Rule 46A
requirements after it was criticised for not
dealing with same in its founding affidavit. With regard to the
latter there might
have been some truth in the criticism that it made
out its case in the replying affidavit. The conclusions I have
reached have
led me to a result where there is at this time no need
to declare the Eldoraigne and Sunderland properties executable. The
applicant
will not be granted this relief due to the order I intend
to make with regard to the set-off.
[175]
This put paid to any
notion that the applicants can rely on the
Rule 46A
notices. For this
reason as well as the order pertaining to set-off I am not prepared
to declare the Eldoraigne and Sunderland
properties executable.
Conclusion
[176]
But for the set-off issue
I would have concluded that the bank’s claim against Crestar
must succeed in as much as no
bona
fide
defence was
raised by it prior to liquidation and the joint liquidators having
been joined also did not raise any defence or opposition
to the
application. The bank will, however, not be entitled to judgment if
the extent of the automatic set-off that will follow
from the
defences raised by the seventh and eighth respondents extinguishes
the whole of the principal debt. For this reason I
intend to postpone
the bank’s application for judgment in the amount claimed with
an order that should its quantum not have
been extinguished by the
effect of the automatic set-off it may approach this court for
judgment in the amount remaining due duly
supplemented by the
necessary affidavits with its calculations. The set-off defence
raised by the seventh and eighth respondents
should succeed to the
extent that the credit balances in the seventh and eighth respondents
accounts have extinguished Crestar’s
debt to the bank.
Mutuality prevailed from the stage that the bank issued proceedings
against Crestar and the sureties given that
as of then the sweeping
arrangement for the term loan and the obligation that set-off does
not apply between Crestar and the bank
must have fallen away from at
the latest 26 July 2021.
[177]
It must be accepted that
the seventh and eighth respondents had credit balances in their
accounts which should be set-off from the
bank’s claim to the
extent that the seventh and eighth respondents did not utilise such
funds. An immediate set-off of at
least R6million held in the name of
Ghousbibi seems inevitable. To the extent that the credit balances in
the seventh and eighth
respondent’s accounts are utilised as
set-off same may not exceed the limit of R6million in respect of each
of the seventh
and eighth respondents suretyships. Although mention
is made of a counterclaim to the same effect there is no such
counterclaim
by them before me. Only a prayer to that effect. That
does not prevent me from issuing a declaratory order to the effect of
such
a prayer. Given that I cannot be certain as to the ultimate
outcome of such calculation I am not prepared to dismiss the
applicant’s
claim outright. It would in any event be entitled
to judgment but for the prayer that that such claim is extinguished
by automatic
set-off. If such claim is not fully extinguished the
applicant should be entitled to judgment for the balance. In any
event it
should be entitled to attorney and client costs up to 10 May
2024 when the set-off was first raised. As far as costs are concerned
as between the applicant and the seventh and eighth respondent the
latter parties are on the face of it entitled to costs as from
10 May
2024. Set-off is described as
compensatio
which is nothing but a form of payment. To the extent that such
credit balances do not extinguish the debt of Crestar and the limit
of R6 million is not yet exceeded in respect of any one or both of
the seventh and eighth respondents suretyships they remain jointly
and severally liable for Crestar’s debts with the second to
fifth respondents and with the Ahmed Jaffer Family Trust duly
represented by the sixth, tenth to twelfth respondents in as much as
any balance remains due to the bank, the one paying the other
to be
excused. The second to fifth respondent and the Ahmed Jaffer Family
Trust’s defence and counterapplication for a debatement
of
account must be dismissed with costs on the party and party scale
“C”. The complexity of the matter as a whole justifies
the applicant launching proceedings in the High Court despite the
fact that it could have issued proceedings in the Magistrate’s
Court. Accordingly, I make the following order:
177.1
The seventh and eight
respondents’ application for leave to file the supplementary
affidavit dated 10 May 2024 in support
of a defence of set-off is
granted with costs on the party and party scale “C”
against the applicant, such costs to
include the costs of the
engagement of one senior counsel and one junior counsel and
calculated as from 10 May 2024 and including
the hearing of the
matter on 16 May 2024;
177.2
The joint liquidators of
the applicant are directed to restate the applicant’s account
with the first respondent taking into
account the credit balances
held by the seventh and eighth respondent in any account held with
the applicant and to set same off
against the debit balances of the
first respondent in the accounts held by the first respondent with
the applicant as from 26 July
2021 on the basis that such set-off
operated automatically as from that date;
177.3
The joint liquidators of
the applicant is ordered to recalculate the outstanding interest in
respect of the daily debit balances
of the first respondent in
alignment with the automatic set-off in paragraph 173.2;
177.4
The maximum credit balance
that may be set-off as declared in paragraph 173.2 is limited to
R6million in respect of each of the
seventh and eighth respondents,
same being the maximum due in terms of the suretyships signed by
them, respectively, in respect
of the first respondents debt to the
applicant;
177.5
The second to fifth
respondents, the Ahmed Jaffer Family Trust, nominally represented by
the sixth, and tenth to twelfth respondents
as well as the seventh
and eight respondents are declared liable for the applicant’s
costs on the attorney and client scale
up to 10 May 2024 same being
the date the set-off was first invoked, such liability being joint
and several, the one paying the
other to be excused.
177.6
The first to fifth and the
Ahmed Jaffer Family Trust’s counterclaim is dismissed with
party and party costs on Scale “C”;
177.7
The applicant’s
claim against the first respondent is postponed
sine
die
and the applicant
is granted leave to approach the court on duly supplemented papers
setting out the calculation of the effect of
the set-off invoked by
the seventh and eighth respondents, for any further relief required
to the extent that the set-off may not
have reduced the quantum of
its claim to nil
and
in
which event the remaining liability, of the first to fifth
respondents, the Ahmed Jaffer Family Trust (nominally represented
by
the sixth, and tenth to twelfth respondents), and that of the seventh
and eighth respondents (to the extent that the set-off
does not
exceed the limit of R6million on their respective suretyships), to
the applicant will be joint and several, the one paying
the other to
be excused and in that event it should recover any additional costs
occasioned by such postponement on the attorney
and client scale.
S VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Date
Judgment reserved:
16
May 2024
Date
Judgment delivered:
31
October 2024
Representation for
applicant
Counsel:
Adv John Peter S.C.
Instructed
by:
Dasoo Attorneys
Suit 11B First Floor
Melrose Boulevard
Melrose Arch
Johannesburg
Tel:
011
684 1468/011 684 2914/011 684 2915
Email:
dasoolaw@netactive.co.za
REF
:
MR
DASOO/HOB135
Representation
for 2
nd
to 6
th
and 10
th
- 12
th
respondents:
Counsel:
Adv
MD K
ὃ
hn
Parc
Nouveau Advocates’ Chambers,
advkohn@gmail.com
Tel:
083
457
7112
Instructed
by:
Jaffer
Inc Attorneys
577
Carl Str
Pretoria
West 183
Tel:
(012) 327 1200
REF:JAFFER/ac
C/O
CHIBA JIVAN ATTORNEYS
190
Barry Hertzog Ave
GREENSIDE
Tel:
(011) 837 2468
Email:
reception@chibajivan.co.za
Representation for
seventh and eighth respondents:
Counsel:
Adv Adrian Botha S.C.
Instructed
by:
Shaheed Dollie Inc
48 Twickenham Avenue
Aucklandpark
Johannesburg
2092
Tel:
(011
) 482 9933
Email:
safraaz@sdollieinc.co.za
ismaeel@sdollieinc.co.za
katleho@sdollieinc.co.za
REF:
S. LAHER/0154
[1]
See
paragraph
6 of Ikraam Jaffer answering affidavit purportedly only on behalf of
the first to sixth respondents
[2]
2021 (6) SA 403 (SCA)
[3]
See
Ghaheri
and others v Firstrand Bank Limited
- 2023 JDR 3991 (GJ)
[4]
1926
AD 286
at 289-290
[5]
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Echo Petroleum CC
2012 (5)
SA 283 (SCA) p 28 - “
The
general rule is that moneys deposited into a bank account fall into
the ownership of the bank. The resulting credit belongs
to
the customer, the bank having a contractual obligation to pay
the customer on demand and to honour cheques validly drawn
on the
account to the extent that it stands in credit:
”
[6]
See p 337
[7]
See
Re
Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA
(No 8)
[1997] 4 All ER 568
(hereafter “
BCCI
8”
)
[8]
See
Ms
Fashions (Pty)Ltd and others v
Bank
of Credit and Commerce International SA
(no
2)
[1993] 3 All ER 769
[9]
See
p 575
[10]
See
annexure “A” to annexure “FA3”
[11]
See
RS
23,2024, D1
Rule 6
-
31
-
6
-
32
[12]
See paragraphs 48 and 49 of the 2
nd
respondent’s answering affidavit.
[13]
See paragraphs 44 – 45 of the second
respondent’s answering affidavit.
[14]
See
Erasmus
Rule 7(1)
,
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992(2) SA 703 (W) and the other cases discussed in the commentary
under
Rule 7.
[15]
See
Absa
Bank Bpk v Janse van Rensburg
-
2002 (3) SA 701
(SCA) para 15
[16]
See
Absa
Bank
above para 15-16
[17]
See Section 133 of Act 71 of 2008.
[18]
See para 11 of his affidavit
[19]
See paras 16-18 of the Supplementary Affidavit of
Emraan Essop Dassoo dated 12 October 2021 and the supporting
affidavits thereto
[20]
See Uniform Rule 30
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