Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1263South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Willis and Another (31542/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1263 (2 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary judgment
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Willis and Another (31542/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1263 (2 December 2024)
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Willis and Another (31542/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1263 (2 December 2024)
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sino date 2 December 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number
:
31542/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Plaintiff
And
BASIL
AUBREY WILLIS
First
Defendant
RECHELLE
WILLIS
Second
Defendant
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed summary application for
monetary judgment and special executability against the first
defendant. The plaintiff also seeks, at the same hearing, a separate
application for default judgment and special executability only
against the second defendant in terms of Rule 46A, because monetary
judgment has already been granted against her.
Background
[2]
Following the joint practice note of both parties filed by counsel,
the background as captured therein
is as set forth in the preceding
paragraphs.
[3]
On or about 18 May 2005 and 4 April
2006, the Plaintiff (represented by a duly authorised official) and
the Defendants concluded
two written Home Loan agreements (‘the
First and Second Loan Agreement’) in terms of which the
Defendants would borrow
the capital amounts of R634 400.00 and R165
600.00, respectively.
[4]
The Defendants’ account fell
into arrears and on or about 28 June 2019, the Defendant’s
account was in arrears to an
amount of R215 478.41 (Two Hundred and
Fifteen Thousand and Four Hundred and Seventy-Eight Rand and
Forty-One Cents) and total
the outstanding amount owed to the
Plaintiff was R1 052 299.78 (One Million and Fifty-Two Thousand and
Two Hundred and Ninety-Nine
Rand and Seventy-Eight Cents).
[5]
On 01 July 2019 and 07 June 2021, the
Plaintiff addressed notices in terms of
Section 129(1)(a)
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
to the Defendants’
domicilium
address which was served by registered mail.
[6]
The Plaintiff then served Combined Summons
and Particulars of Claims at the Defendants’ chosen
domicilium
address on 12 September 2019. The Defendants then served their
notice of intention to defend on 19 September 2019. On 25 May 2020,
the first defendant served his plea. At the time when the First
Defendant served his plea, he had been placed
ipso facto
barred from pleading. Further, the applicant was authorised to serve
a
section 129
notice on the defendant as per the court order by Yende
AJ dated 5 March 2021.
[7]
After the application for summary judgment
was launched against both defendants, the Court per the
order of
Engelbrecht AJ, granted leave to defend the application in favour of
the first defendant during November 2021 and granted
default judgment
against the second defendant as she had not filed her notice of
intention to defend. So, the only relief sought
against her, as
already stated, is the executability of the judgment on the immovable
property.
Contentions
by the first defendant
[8]
The first defendant having filed a plea
resists the application for summary judgment. In his plea and
opposing affidavit against the summary judgment, the first defendant
firstly, states that due to Covid-19 which resulted in the
national
shutdown, his real estate business suffered financially, and it was
impossible for him to perform his repayment obligations,
the
plaintiff now applies for summary judgment which is being resisted by
the first defendant. Secondly, he also contends that
Standard Bank
failed to comply with the
section 129
(1) of the
National Credit Act,
no: 34 of 2005
in that the notice calling up the loans was not
delivered to him.
[9]
He states that he made numerous attempts to
restructure his loan without success with the plaintiff.
He argues
that he has minor children that he must maintain and that the
immovable property should not be declared especially executable
in
terms of Rule 46A of the Uniform Rules. Other than the bare denials
alluded to herein, the first defendant admits all the averments
made
by the applicant in its comprehensive particulars of claim.
Issue
for determination
[10]
The issues for determination are firstly, whether there is a triable
issue based on the defence of the impossibility
of performance due to
Covid-19 and secondly, whether the alleged non-delivery of
section 129(1) notice offers refuge to the
first defendant and thus a
triable issue.
The Legal
principles
Summary judgment
[11] I
will now deal with the principles on summary judgment, the defence of
impossibility of performance and
the alleged failure to serve the
first defendant notice in terms of section 129.
[12]
The summary judgment application is regulated by Rule 32 of the
Uniform Rules which states thus:
“
Summary judgment
(1)
The plaintiff may, after the defendant has delivered a plea, apply to
court for summary judgment on
each of such claims in the summons as
is only—
(a) on a liquid document;
(b) for a liquidated
amount in money;
(c) for delivery of
specified movable property; or
(d) for ejectment.”
[13]
The objective of the rule is to prevent a
plaintiff’s claim, based upon certain causes of action,
from
being delayed by what amounts to abuse of the process of court.
[1]
The procedure is not designed to shut down a defendant who can show
that there is a triable issue applicable to the claim from
laying his
defence before the court.
[2]
[14]
In
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty)Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
[3]
, the Court said the following regarding the procedure:
“
The
rationale for summary judgment proceedings is impeccable. The
procedure is not intended to deprive a defendant with a triable
issue
or a sustainable defence of her/his day in court. After a century of
successful application in our courts, summary judgment
proceedings
can hardly continue to be described as extraordinary. Our courts,
both of first instance and at appellate level, have
during that time
rightly been trusted to ensure that a defendant with a triable issue
is not shut out. In the
Maharaj
case
at 425G-426E, Corbett JA, was keen to ensure first, an examination of
whether there has been sufficient disclosure by a defendant
of the
nature and grounds of his defence and the facts upon which it is
founded. The second consideration is that the defence so
disclosed
must be both
bona
fide
and
good in law. A court which is satisfied that this threshold has been
crossed is then bound to refuse summary judgment. Corbett
JA also
warned against requiring of a defendant the precision apposite to
pleadings. However, the learned judge was equally astute
to ensure
that recalcitrant debtors pay what is due to a creditor.
Having
regard to its purpose and its proper application, summary judgment
proceedings only hold terrors and are ‘drastic’
for a
defendant who has no defence. Perhaps the time has come to discard
these labels and to concentrate rather on the proper application
of
the rule, as set out with customary clarity and elegance by Corbett
JA in the
Maharaj
case
at 425G-426E.
”
[15]
Although the remedy is regarded as stringent or extraordinary in that
it
effectively
closes the door of the court on the defendant without affording an
opportunity to ventilate the case by way of trial
[4]
,
the situation is different in circumstances where the defence raised
by the defendant is a
counterclaim
instead
of a plea. In that case, even where summary judgement has been
granted for that part of the claim that would be extinguished
by the
counterclaim, the defendant can still pursue the counterclaim by
issuing summons in a separate action.
[5]
[16]
The
plaintiff
must confine himself to what the rule allows;
[6]
and he
is not allowed to file the replying affidavit
[7]
or cross-examine the defendant or any other person who gives
evidence.
[8]
these restrictions
upon the plaintiff make it clear that an application for summary
judgement is in no sense a preliminary trial
of the issues
involved.
[9]
The procedure is
intended neither to give the plaintiff a tactical advantage in the
trial
[10]
nor to provide a
preview of the defendants evidence or to limit the defences to those
raised by the defendant.
##
## [17]
On application for summary judgment, the rule
requires that a statement of facts should accompany the application
in terms of which the deponent can positively swear to the facts
forming the basis of the application.
[17]
On application for summary judgment, the rule
requires that a statement of facts should accompany the application
in terms of which the deponent can positively swear to the facts
forming the basis of the application.
[18]
In
Barclays
National Bank Ltd v Love
[11]
(quoted
with approval in
Maharaj
[12]
at
424B-D) the following is said:
“
We
are concerned here with an affidavit made by the manager of the very
branch of the bank at which overdraft facilities were enjoyed
by the
defendant. The nature of the deponent’s office in itself
suggests very strongly that he would in the ordinary course
of his
duties acquire personal knowledge of the defendant’s financial
standing with the bank. This is not to suggest that
he would have
personal knowledge of every withdrawal of money made by the defendant
or that he personally would have made every
entry in the bank’s
ledgers or statements of account;
indeed,
if that were the degree of personal knowledge required it is
difficult to conceive of circumstances in which a bank could
ever
obtain summary judgment.”
##
## [19]
InRees
and Another vInvestec
Bank Limited[13],
the Supreme Court of Appeal, quoting with approval the requirements
of an affidavit said the following:
[19]
In
Rees
and Another v
Investec
Bank Limited
[13]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal, quoting with approval the requirements
of an affidavit said the following:
“
In
Maharaj
[14]
,
Corbett
JA in considering the requirement that the affidavit should be made
by the plaintiff himself ‘or by any other person
who can swear
positively to the facts’ stated:
‘
Concentrating
more particularly on requirement (
a
)
above, I would point out that it contemplates the affidavit being
made by the plaintiff himself or some other person “who
can
swear positively to the facts”.
In
the latter event, such other person’s
ability
to swear positively to the facts is essential
to
the effectiveness of the affidavit as a basis for summary judgment;
and the Court entertaining the application therefor must
be
satisfied,
prima facie, that the deponent is such a person.
Generally
speaking, before a person can swear positively to facts in
legal
proceedings they must be within his personal knowledge.
For
this reason
the
practice has been adopted, both in regard to the present Rule 32 and
in regard to some of its provincial predecessors (and the
similar
rule in the magistrates’ courts), of requiring that a deponent
to an affidavit in support of summary judgment, other
than the
plaintiff himself, should state, at least, that the facts are within
his personal knowledge (or make some averment to
that effect), unless
such direct knowledge appears from other facts stated . . .
The
mere assertion by a deponent that he “can swear positively to
the facts” (an assertion which merely reproduces the
wording of
the Rule) is not regarded as being sufficient, unless there are good
grounds for believing that the deponent fully appreciated
the meaning
of these words. . . In my view, this is a salutary practice.
While
undue formalism in procedural matters is always to be eschewed
,
it is important in summary judgment applications under Rule 32 that,
in substance, the plaintiff should do what is required of
him by the
Rule. The extraordinary and drastic nature of the remedy of summary
judgment in its present form has often been judicially
emphasised . .
. The grant of the remedy is based upon the supposition that the
plaintiff’s claim is unimpeachable and that
the defendant’s
defence is bogus or bad in law. One of the aids to ensuring that this
is the position is the affidavit filed
in support of the application;
and to achieve this end it is important that the affidavit should be
deposed to by either by the
plaintiff himself or by someone who has
personal knowledge of the facts.
Where
the affidavit fails to measure up to these requirements, the defect
may, nevertheless, be cured by reference to other documents
relating
to the proceedings which are properly before the Court. . .The
principle is that, in deciding whether or not to grant
summary
judgment, the Court looks at the matter “at the end of the day”
on all the documents that are properly before
it….
’”
Impossibility
of performance
[20]
Supervening impossibility occurs when the performance of
contractual
obligations
become objectively impossible due to unforeseeable and unavoidable
events that are not the fault of any party to the
contract.
## [21]If
provision is not made contractually by way of aforce
majeureclause,
a party will only be able to rely on the very stringent provisions of
the common law doctrine of supervening impossibility
of performance,
for which objective impossibility is a requirement[15].
Performance is not excused in all cases offorce
majeure[16].
[21]
If
provision is not made contractually by way of a
force
majeure
clause,
a party will only be able to rely on the very stringent provisions of
the common law doctrine of supervening impossibility
of performance,
for which objective impossibility is a requirement
[15]
.
Performance is not excused in all cases of
force
majeure
[16]
.
[22]
In
MV
Snow Crystal
[17]
, the
Supreme Court of Appeal (per Scott JA) said as follows:
“
As
a general rule impossibility of performance brought about by vis
major or casus fortuitus will excuse performance of a contract.
But
it will not always do so. In each case it is necessary to ‘look
to the nature of the contract, the relation of the parties,
the
circumstances of the case, and the nature of the impossibility
invoked by the defendant, to see whether the general rule ought,
in
the particular circumstances of the case, to be applied’. The
rule will not avail a defendant if the impossibility is
self-created;
nor will it avail the defendant if the impossibility is due to his or
her fault. Save possibly in circumstances where
a plaintiff seeks
specific performance, the onus of proving the impossibility will lie
upon the defendant
.”
[23]
In
Unlocked
Properties 4 (Pty) Limited v A Commercial Properties CC
[18]
, the
court, citing Unibank Savings & Loans Ltd (formerly Community
Bank) v Absa Bank Ltd
[19]
, stated
as follows:
“
The
impossibility must be absolute, or objective as opposed to relative
or subjective. Subjective impossibility to receive or to
make
performance does not terminate the contract or extinguish the
obligation.”
[20]
[24]
In
Unibank
it
was held that—
“
Impossibility
is furthermore not implicit in a change of financial strength or in
commercial circumstances which cause compliance
with the contractual
obligations to be difficult, expensive or unaffordable.”
[21]
[25]
In
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[22]
it was held that:
“
For instance,
common law does not require people to do that, which is impossible.
“
This
principle is expressed in the maxim
lex
non cogit ad impossibilia
–
no one should be compelled to perform or comply with that which is
impossible.”
This
maxim derives from the principles of justice and equity, which
underlie the common law. Over the years, the maxim has become
entrenched in our law and has been applied to avoid time bar
provisions in statutes.”
[26]
In
Montsisi
[23]
,
the Appellate Division held that the principle expressed by the
maxim
lex
non cogit ad impossibilia
applied
to a statutory time bar provision contained in section 32(1) of the
Police Act 7 of 1958. The case concerned a plaintiff
who sued the
Minister of Police for damages for unlawful assault alleged to have
been committed upon him by police while he was
being detained in
terms of section 6 of the Terrorism Act 83 of 1967. The court held
that it was impossible for the plaintiff to
comply with the
provisions of section 32(1) while he was in detention, and that
therefore the expiry period provided for in section
32(1) did not run
against him so long as he was in detention.
[27]
In
the matter of
Transnet
Ltd v The MV Snow Crystal
[24]
it was said:
"This brings me to
the appellant's defence of supervening impossibility of performance.
As a general rule impossibility of
performance brought about by vis
major or casus fortuitus will excuse performance of a contract. But
it will not always do so.
In each case, it is necessary to 'look to
the nature of the contract, the relation of the parties, the
circumstances of the case,
and the nature of the impossibility
invoked by the defendant, to see whether the general rule ought, in
the particular circumstances
of the case, to be applied. The rule
will not avail a defendant if the impossibility is self-
created; nor will it avail the defendant if the impossibility
is due to his or her fault. Save possibly in circumstances where a
plaintiff seeks specific performance, the onus of proving the
impossibility will lie upon the defendant."
[28]
In
World
Leisure Holidays (Pty) Ltd v Georges
[25]
,
the court dealt with
temporary
impossibility. It stated that:
“
The temporary
impossibility of performance does not, of itself, bring a contract to
an immediate end. The respondent's alternative
claim accordingly
raises the question of when a creditor is entitled to treat a
contract as being at an end whilst performance
is temporarily
impossible. The answer is that he is only entitled to do so where the
foundation of the contract has been destroyed;
or where all
performance is already, or would inevitably become, impossible, or
where part of the performance has become, or would
inevitably be,
impossible and he is not bound to accept the remaining performance."
[29]
In the instant case, there is no averment on how
Covid-19 made it impossible for the first defendant to
perform his
obligations. No financials records have been attached to the opposing
papers. The bare denial under paragraph 19 of
the particulars of
claim which deals with the balance of the two loans as at 28 June
2019 is not a defence and opens itself up
for summary judgment. The
first defendant does not advance any averment such as that he is up
to date with his repayments obligations.
Accordingly, I am satisfied
that there is no triable issue on this point.
Non-delivery
of the Notice in terms of section 129(1)
[30]
The first defendant denies that he received the
section 129(1) notice.
Section
129
[26]
, envisages the
required procedure prior to enforcing a debt agreement and further
that one may not commence any legal proceedings
to enforce the
agreement before:
(a)
proving notice to the debtor, and
(b)
complying with section 13.
[31]
In
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[27]
,
held
that delivery of section 129 through postal service and confirmation
of such delivery entails the following:
(a)
the s129 notice was sent through registered mail to the correct
postal branch and nominated address
by the consumer. A track and
trace may be used to verify this information, and
(b)
the Post Office issued a notification to the consumer that a
registered item was available for
her collection.
[32]
The Plaintiff served the s129 notice to the first
defendant by service through the Sheriff on 1 and 2 July
2019. The
first defendant was sent first notification in respect of the Reeds
post office on the 13th of September 2022 and the
parcel track slip
which confirm the delivery has been filed as part of the papers
before me. I am satisfied that the plaintiff
has complied with the
procedures of service to the chosen address of the first defendant.
There is therefore no merit for this
defence and absent that, there
is no triable issue.
[33]
Having regard to the bare denials by the first
defendant, I am not persuaded by his resistance to the summary
application that there is any triable issue that requires the matter
to be referred to trial. I say so because not only does the
first
defendant admit that he is behind with his repayment obligations, but
he also avers that his attempt to have the repayment
restructured
were not accepted by Standard Bank. I have not been provided with any
authority to the proposition that refusal by
the plaintiff to
restructure the repayment of a loan is a defence. Accordingly, the
application for summary judgment must succeed
.
Rule
46A
[34]
I have considered the submissions made in respect of the application
for the declaring the immovable property
especially executable.
Having done so, I am not satisfied that the evaluation performed in
respect thereof complies with Rule 46A
because a trainee performed
the valuation. The deponent on valuation states that he did not deal
with the valuation but that the
valuation was performed by his
candidate valuer who is under his super vision.
Order
[35]
Having heard Counsel and
having considered the written heads of argument and having read the
documents filed of record, the following
order is made:
1.
Summary Judgment is granted against the
First Defendant
,
in the following terms:
a.
Payment of the sum of R1 052 299.78;
b.
Interest on the amount of R1 052 299.78 at a rate of 10.25% per
annum, from 28 June 2019 to date of payment, both dates included;
c.
Payment of monthly insurance premiums of R1 057.11 from 28 June 2019
to date of payment; and
d.
Costs of suit on the Attorney and Client scale.
2.
As Against
Both Defendants
:
Summary
Judgment is granted against the First Defendant and Default Judgment
in terms of Rule 46A to declare the immovable property
PORTION
4 OF ERF 7[…] K[…] T[…]
REGISTRATION
DIVISION I.R.,
PROVINCE
OF GAUTENG
MEASURING
1670 (ONE THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED A SEVENTY) SQUARE METERS HELD OF DEED
OF TRANSFER T81332/2005 SUBJECT TO THE CONDITIONS
THEREIN CONTAINED
(“the Property”) is postponed
sine die
;
3.
The applicant is directed to perform an independent valuation by a
suitably qualified valuer within 20 days of this order to
assist the
Court to exercise its judicial oversight in terms of rule 46A;
4.
The applicant is directed to supplement its papers in the Rule 46A
application with the new evaluation and set the application
down on
the same papers duly supplemented.
5.
The costs of the Rule 46A application are reserved.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties/ their legal representatives by email and
by uploading to the
electronic file on Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
2 December 2024.
Appearances:
For the plaintiff: Adv M
Amojee
Instructed by Strauss
Daly Inc.
For
the defendant: Adv K Ntjana
Instructed
by Austin Shirinda Attorneys
Date
of Hearing: 2 September 2024
Date
of Judgment: 2 December 2024
[1]
Meek
v Kruger
1958(3)
SA154(T)at 159-160;
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty)Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
200(5)
SA 1 (SCA)at 11C-G.
[2]
Majola
v Nitro Securitisation 1 (Pty)Ltd
2012
(1) SA 226(SCA)
at 232F-G.
## [3][2009]
ZASCA 23; 2009 (5) SA 1 (SCA); [2009] 3 All SA 407 (SCA) at para 32
-33.
[3]
[2009]
ZASCA 23; 2009 (5) SA 1 (SCA); [2009] 3 All SA 407 (SCA) at para 32
-33.
[4]
Stock
Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
above
at para 32.
[5]
Soil
Fumigation Services Lowveld CC v Chemfit Technical Products (Pty)
Ltd
2004
(6) SA 29
(SCA) at 35D-F; Erasmus, Superior Court Practice, Vol.2,
D1-384 para 2.
[6]
Venter
v Cassumjee
1956(2)
SA 242(N)
[7]
Rule 32(4) Erasmus ,above D1-386 para 2
[8]
Rule 32 (4)
[9]
Belrex
95 CC v Barday 2021
(3)
SA178(WCC) at para 25.
[10]
Uranovsky
v Pascal
1964(2)
SA 348(C);
Hodgetts
Timbers (East London) (Pty) Ltd v HBC Properties (Pty)Ltd
1972(4) SA 208(E)
Howff
(Pvt) Ltd v Tromp’s Engineering (Pvt)Ltd
1977(2) SA 267;
Flamingo
General Centre v Rossburg Food Market
1978
(1) SA 586
(D);
Beltrex
95 CC v Barday
2021
(3) SA 178
(WCC) at para 25.
[11]
1975
(2) SA at 514 (D) at 516H-517A.
[12]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976
(1) SA 418
(A)
[13]
[2014] ZASCA 38
;
2014 (4) SA 220
(SCA) paras 10,
[14]
Above
foot note 12.
## [15]Matshazi
v Mezepoli Melrose Arch (Pty) Ltd and Another[2020]
ZAGPJHC 136para
36.
[15]
Matshazi
v Mezepoli Melrose Arch (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 136
para
36.
[16]
Glencore
Grain Africa (Pty) Ltd v Du Plessis NO & Others
[2007]
JOL 21043
(O);
(4621/99)
[2002]
ZAFSHC 2
(28
March 2002) at 10.
[17]
MV
Snow Crystal Transnet Ltd t/a National Ports Authority v Owner of MV
Snow Crystal
[2008]
ZASCA 27
;
2008
(4) SA 111
(SCA)
para 28
[18]
[2016]
ZAGPJHC 373
[19]
2000
(4)
SA 191 (W).
[20]
Unlocked
Properties- above para 23. In
Unibank
,
the court has stated as follows: “A contract is …
terminated only by objective impossibility (which always or normally
must be total). Subjective impossibility to receive or make
performance at most justifies the other party in exercising an
election to cancel the contract.”
[21]
Unibank
Savings
(note
19 above) at 198D.
[22]
2007(5)
SA 323, CC para 75
[23]
Montsisi
v Minister van Polisie
1984(1)
SA 619(A)
[24]
2008(4)
SA 111 SCA, para 28
[25]
(2002)
(5) SA at 532F-534G
[26]
The
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
[27]
2014 (3) SA 56
(CC).
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