Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 225South Africa
Capitec Bank Limited v Mangena and Another (2021/28660) [2023] ZAGPJHC 225 (16 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Capitec Bank Limited v Mangena and Another (2021/28660) [2023] ZAGPJHC 225 (16 March 2023)
Capitec Bank Limited v Mangena and Another (2021/28660) [2023] ZAGPJHC 225 (16 March 2023)
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sino date 16 March 2023
FLYNOTES:
RESCISSION AND COMPLIANCE WITH RULES
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Rescission – Failure to file heads –
Procedure allowing striking out of a claim or defence
for
non-compliance with the rules – Developed for use in action
proceedings before any evidence has been led –
In motion
proceedings the affidavits constitute both pleadings and the
evidence – Court not entitled to overlook merits
simply
because a procedural rule or court order has not been complied
with – Application to dismiss rescission application
dismissed.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 2021/28660
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 16 March 2023
In the matter between:
CAPITEC
BANK LIMITED
Applicant
and
LERATO
JACQUELINE MANGENA
First
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
Summary
Practice –
application for dismissal of a recission application for failure to
file heads of argument – procedure allowing
the striking out of
a claim or defence for non-compliance with the rules was developed
for use in the context of action proceedings
before any evidence has
been led – procedure not of easy application in motion
proceedings, where the affidavits constitute
both the pleadings and
the evidence – a court is not entitled to overlook the merits
of an application simply because a procedural
rule or court order has
not been complied with – applicant for relief striking out a
claim or defence in application proceedings
must show both
non-compliance with the relevant procedural rule or court order and
that the claim or defence to be struck is itself
without merit.
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicant, Capitec, seeks the dismissal of a rescission
application brought by the respondent, Ms. Mangena. The application
was brought before me in unopposed motion court on the sole basis
that Ms. Mangena had failed to submit her heads of argument in
the
recission application.
2
The basis for the application was said to be section 9.8.2
(12) of this court’s practice manual. That section of the
practice
manual authorises an application to this court for an order
compelling a party who has not timeously filed heads of argument in
an opposed motion to file their heads within a period of not less
than 5 days, failing which “the defaulting party’s
claim
or defence [will] be struck out”. The provision appears to be
inspired by similar sections of the Uniform Rules of
Court which
entitle a party, in appropriate circumstances, to apply for the
striking out of a defence or the dismissal of a claim.
For example,
Rule 35 (7) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides that a party that
is delinquent in making discovery of documents
may have their claim
or defence struck out.
3
In the context of action proceedings, which are generally
longer-lasting, more costly, and procedurally more complex than
motion
proceedings, the rules permitting a claim to be dismissed or a
defence to be struck out are important procedural tools. They enable
a court to ensure that a party with a frivolous claim or defence is
not permitted to delay the trial process through sheer non-compliance
with the rules designed to move the trial forward. They also enable
the court to protect its process against a wide variety of
other
potential abuses.
4
The strike-out and dismissal procedures are particularly
well-suited to action proceedings because no evidence of the claim
has
generally been led at the time they are engaged. In striking out
a claim or defence, a court does no more than bring an early end
to a
trial action because of a party’s persistent failure to observe
the rules. In doing so, the court need not have regard
to the merits
of the action, or the strength of the claim or defence to be struck
out. Indeed, the court cannot do so, because
it will not have seen or
heard the evidence necessary to sustain the claim or defence to be
dismissed or struck out.
5
Motion proceedings are different. Every affidavit in motion
proceedings contains both a pleading and the evidence necessary to
sustain
it. When a court is asked to dismiss a claim o
r
strike out a defence for failure to file heads of argument promptly,
it does so once all the evidence thought necessary to sustain
the
claim or defence has been placed before it. It seems to me that, in
these circumstances, a court is not at liberty simply to
ignore the
affidavits and to dismiss a claim or strike out a defence merely
because one of the parties has failed to take an important
procedural
step. The court must go further, and satisfy itself that, on the
evidence before it, the claim or defence sought to
be dismissed or
struck out has no intrinsic merit.
6
This court has already recognised that
necessity in the context of applications for eviction under the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from, and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”) (see
Gefen
v De Wet NO
2022 (3) SA 465
(GJ)
(“
Gefen
”),
paragraphs 26 and 27). In
Gefen
,
the court held that an application to strike out a defence under the
practice manual did not displace the mandatory exercise of
a court’s
equitable discretion under the PIE Act. The decision in
Gefen
was undoubtedly correct (and is, in any event, binding on me), but I
see no difference in principle between a court’s obligation
to
exercise its discretion under a statute, and a court’s general
duty to apply its mind to relevant evidence placed before
it. The
failure to file heads of argument does not make relevant evidence
irrelevant. Nor does it mean that the substantive law
applicable to
the application in question no longer applies. Accordingly, the duty
to consider whether a claim or defence is meritorious
in itself
before dismissing it or striking it must, in my view, apply in all
application proceedings.
7
In this case, Ms. Mangena wishes to rescind
an order of this court dated 19 August 2021. The 19 August 2021 order
granted a money
judgment against Ms. Mangena under a mortgage bond
passed over her primary residence. It appears that Capitec asked the
court that
granted the 19 August 2021 order to give judgment for both
the full accelerated amount due on the mortgage credit agreement, and
to make an order declaring Ms. Mangena’s home specially
executable. The court granted the money judgment, but it postponed
the claim for special execution. This, it appears, was because the
summons initiating Capitec’s claim had not been served
personally on Ms. Mangena. The court directed that Ms. Mangena be
served personally before the claim for special execution was
re-enrolled.
8
This approach was inconsistent with the general rule laid down
by this court in
ABSA Bank Ltd v Mokebe and Related Cases
2018
(6) SA 492
(GJ). The general rule is that, where the mortgaged
property is a home, Judges of this Division will not entertain and
determine
an application for a money judgment on a mortgage credit
agreement separately from the application to execute against the
mortgaged
property. The money judgment forms part of the cause of
action for the application for leave to execute. Whether or not the
money
judgment should be granted is inextricably bound up with the
question of whether execution against the mortgaged property is
proportionate,
within the meaning of the decisions of the
Constitutional Court in
Jaftha v Schoeman; Van Rooyen v Stoltz
[2004] ZACC 25
;
2005 (2) SA 140
(CC) and in
Gundwana v Steko Development CC
2011 (3) SA 608
(CC).
9
That there were good reasons to depart from this rule is not
apparent from the 19 August 2021 order, or from anything else I can
see on the documents filed. Ms. Mangena says in her rescission
application that she had no notice of Capitec’s application
until she was personally served with the application for leave to
execute in terms of the 19 August 2021 court order.
10
Accordingly, it seems to me that Ms. Mangena’s recission
application is one of some merit. Although the recission application
does not address Rule 42 (1) (b), it seems likely that the 19 August
2021 order was erroneously sought or granted both because
Ms. Mangena
had not been served with the application at the time it was placed
before the court, and because the court that granted
the 19 August
2021 order departed from the rule established in
Mokebe
without any reason to do so.
11
I put these difficulties to Mr. Ahir, who appeared before me
for Capitec, and I gave him an opportunity to address me on the
merits
of the recission application. Mr. Ahir declined that
opportunity, pressing the application only on the basis that
Ms.
Mangena had not timeously filed her heads of argument, even after
having been directed to do so by an order of this court dated
9
September 2022
. In the circumstances of this case, to dismiss
the recission application solely on that basis would, I think, have
been an injustice.
12
For all these reasons, I make the following order –
12.1
the application to dismiss the rescission application is dismissed
with costs.
12.2
the recission application is to be placed on the opposed motion
roll.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be
16 March 2023.
HEARD
ON: 7
February 2023
DECIDED
ON: 16
March 2023
For
the Applicant: U
Ahir
Instructed
by: Jay
Mothobi Incorporated
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