Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 30South Africa
Munsami v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others (2018/47106) [2023] ZAGPJHC 30 (20 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 January 2023
Headnotes
Judgment application that served before Mtati AJ and in particular the service of the summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Munsami v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others (2018/47106) [2023] ZAGPJHC 30 (20 January 2023)
Munsami v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others (2018/47106) [2023] ZAGPJHC 30 (20 January 2023)
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sino date 20 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no: 2018/47106
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
20
January 2023
In
the matter between:
DAYALAN
MUNSAMI
Applicant
and
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
First
Respondent
SHERIFF
RANDBURG SOUTH WEST
Second
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS JOHANNESBURG
Third
Respondent
HAZEL
IRENE KNOWLER
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
– LEAVE TO APPEAL
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading
the signed copy to
Caselines.
MOULTRIE
AJ
[1]
The applicant seeks leave to appeal
against the order made in my judgment delivered in this matter of 10
October 2022, in which
I dismissed the applicant’s application
for the setting aside of the sale in execution and transfer to the
fourth respondent
of his primary residence (“the property”)
pursuant to a judgment granted to the first respondent (“the
Bank”)
by his Lordship Mr Acting Justice Mtati on 9 May 2019.
[2]
The application for leave to appeal was
originally set down for a “virtual” hearing at 09h00 on
30 November 2022. When
the matter was called, there was no appearance
for the applicant. Upon further investigation, it emerged that the
attorneys for
the applicant had not been notified of the hearing date
by the Registrar’s office, and the hearing date had not been
endorsed
on the electronic file in accordance with paragraph 110 of
Practice Directive 2 of 2022.
[3]
I issued an order postponing the
application for leave to appeal until 09h00 on 20 January 2023 via a
videoconference. In accordance
with paragraph 110 of Practice
Directive 2 of 2022, the CaseLines electronic file was endorsed on 30
November 2023 (by means on
a “widely shared note”) with
the date and time so determined, as well as the link to the virtual
hearing.
[4]
When the matter was called on at 09h00
on 20 January 2023, there was no appearance for the applicant. I
stood the matter down until
09h10, by which time the position had not
changed. Following brief submissions by counsel for the first and
fourth respondents,
I issued an order dismissing the application for
leave to appeal with costs, indicating that reasons for such refusal
would follow.
These are those reasons.
[5]
In deciding whether to grant leave to
appeal, I am required to apply the provisions of
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
. In the absence of any suggestion
that subsections 17(1)(a)(ii), (b) or (c) apply, leave to appeal may
only be given where I am
of the opinion that the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success.
[6]
The only conclusions reached by me in my
judgment that are challenged in the application for leave to appeal
are:
(a)
that the First Respondent was not
required to move a separate Application in terms of
Rule 46A
;
(b)
that the provisions of
Rule 46A
were
substantially complied with in the Summary Judgment application that
served before Mtati AJ and in particular the service
of the summary
judgment application constituted service;
(c)
that there was no evidence to suggest
that Mtati AJ did not consider that
Rule 46A
orders were warranted or
that he failed to consider the information placed before him in
relation to the special executability
of the property and the issue
of a reserve price; and
(d)
that Applicant failed to make any
allegations pertaining to whether the Fourth Respondent’s
purchase of the property was in
bad faith and that the sale was “
not
without some inappropriate action
”
[7]
For the reasons set out in my judgment,
which I do not depart from in any respect, I am not persuaded that
the applicants have reasonable
prospects of success on appeal in
relation to any of these aspects. To these reasons I only add the
following.
[8]
Even if it is assumed (i) that Mtati AJ
did not consider that the
Rule 46A
orders were warranted; or (ii)
that he failed to consider the information placed before him in
relation to the special executability
of the property set out in the
particulars of claim and verified on oath in the summary judgment
affidavit; or (iii) that the orders
were irregular because they were
sought as ‘part’ of the Summary Judgment application;
that would be irrelevant to
the current application in the absence of
a successful rescission application. It was not open to me to
overturn the order of Mtati
AJ, and it remains presumptively valid.
The sale in execution of the property at auction without a reserve
price also remains presumptively
valid.
[9]
In any event, I can conceive of no basis
upon which a rescission application, if brought, could have been
successful:
(a)
I have not been referred to any case
(nor have I been able to find any), in which it was held that that an
applicant for summary
judgment in relation to a residence is required
to move a separate application in terms of
Rule 46A.
In fact, the
precise opposite would appear to form part of the
ratio
decidendi
in
ABSA
Bank v Mokebe and Related Cases
2018
(6) SA 492
(GJ) at paras 11 to 29. Apart from the further judgments
referred to in my judgment, I also refer in this regard to
First
Rand Bank Limited vs Folscher and Another and Similar Matters
2011 (4) 314 (GP) at paras 55 and 67.
(b)
In my view, service of the summary
judgment application on the applicant’s attorneys constituted
substantial compliance with
the requirements of
Rule 46A(3)(d)
, in
the sense that the underlying purpose of the requirement of personal
service was in fact met by service on the applicant’s
attorneys. There is no evidence that the applicant had terminated his
attorney’s mandate prior to the service of the application
for
summary judgment.
[10]
The required standard to be met for an
applicant to impugn a sale in execution and consequent registration
of transfer of immovable
property is that the purchaser took transfer
of the property in bad faith with knowledge of the alleged defect in
the sale. The
highwater mark of the applicant’s case in this
regard is that the property was sold by public auction without any
reserve
price for an amount far below its true value at a valid sale
in execution which was held. Unfortunate as these facts may be, they
do not support an inference of bad faith, nor indeed even an
inference that the sale was “
not
without some inappropriate action
”
(which is in any event an insufficient basis upon which to found the
relief sought by the applicant).
[11]
It is for these reasons that I dismissed
the application for leave to appeal with costs.
RJ
Moultrie AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
DATE
HEARD: 20
January 2023
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED: 20
January 2023
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant: No
appearance
For
the 1
st
Respondent:
S Jacobs
of Stupel Berman
Inc.
For
the 4
th
Respondent: L
Mhlanga
instructed
by Precious
Muleya Inc.
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