Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 244South Africa
Investec Bank Ltd v Knoop and Others (2011/11563) [2023] ZAGPJHC 244 (20 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Investec Bank Ltd v Knoop and Others (2011/11563) [2023] ZAGPJHC 244 (20 March 2023)
Investec Bank Ltd v Knoop and Others (2011/11563) [2023] ZAGPJHC 244 (20 March 2023)
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sino date 20 March 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2011/11563
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
20/03/2023
In
the matter between –
INVESTEC
BANK LTD APPLICANT
/ DEFENDANT
And
KNOOP,
KURT ROBERT NO 1st
RESPONDENT / PLAINTIFF
MOTALA,
ENVER MOHAMED NO 2nd
RESPONDENT / PLAINTIFF
KAJEE,
ZEENATH, NO 3rd
RESPONDENT / PLAINTIFF
NKOMO,
MDUDUZI CHRISTOPHER, NO 4th RESPONDENT / PLAINTIFF
MBATHA,
YVONNE THOKOZILE, NO 5th
RESPONDENT / PLAINTIFF
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Rule
47(4) of Uniform Rules – plaintiff’s claim dismissed
after failing to put up security in eleven years Power to
dismiss to
be exercised with caution
Order
[1]
I make the following order:
1.
The application to file a supplementary answering affidavit is
dismissed;
2.
The plaintiffs are ordered to pay the costs of the application
to file a supplementary answering affidavit on the scale as between
attorney and client;
3.
The pending action instituted by the plaintiffs against the
defendants under case number 2011/11563 is dismissed;
4.
The plaintiffs are ordered to pay the costs of the action
dismissed under case number 2011/11563 on the attorney and client
scale;
5.
The plaintiffs are ordered to pay the costs of this
application in terms of Rule 47(4) on the attorney and client scale.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This is an
application
[1]
in terms of Rule
47(4) initiated in September 2022. The subrule provides that the
Court may dismiss any proceedings instituted
or strike out any
pleadings filed by the party in default, or make such other order as
to it may seem meet had security not been
given within a reasonable
time.
[4]
Rule 47(4)
reflects the previously existing
[2]
inherent jurisdiction that the High Court had to dismiss proceedings
when a party ordered to put up security, fails to comply with
the
order.
[3]
[5]
The power
to dismiss proceedings must be exercised sparingly and with
circumspection.
[4]
The
liquidators
[6]
The present respondents (“the liquidators” of Rollco
Roofing Systems
(Pty) Ltd) were appointed provisionally on 13
February 2008. Summons was served on 13 April 2011. In the summons
the liquidators
claimed R5 043 793.85 from the defendant,
now the applicant (“the bank”). The money was alleged to
have been
paid by Rollco to the bank in January 2008. The claim was
based on
sections 29
and
30
of the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
and
section 340(1) of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973.
[7]
An application was summary judgment was opposed in 2011 and leave to
defend
was granted by consent. A declaration was served after notice
of bar had been given. The bank then served notices in terms of Rule
23(1) and Rule 30(2)(b), and in terms of Rule 47. The application for
security application was premised on a number of grounds,
inter alia
the defence of prescription that had also been raised in the summary
judgment application.
[8]
On 25
October 2011 Moshidi J granted an order
[5]
in terms of which the liquidators were ordered
[6]
to give security for the costs of their action against the bank in
the amount of R300 000 within ten days of the date of the
order.
The action was stayed pending compliance.
[9]
The respondents never put up the necessary security and the ten-day
period expired
in November 2011.
[10]
In September 2014 the liquidators delivered a notice to amend their
summons and declaration. The bank
objected on the basis that the
liquidators had failed to put up the security as required by the
court order three years earlier.
Nothing happened for seven months
and then the liquidators filed amended pages purportedly in
accordance with the notice to amend
of 2014.
[11]
The bank
responded with a notice to remove cause of complaint in terms of Rule
30(2)(b). In June 2015 Wright J granted an order
[7]
in terms of Rule 30(1), with a punitive cost order against the
liquidators.
[12]
The liquidators withdrew their notice to amend.
[13]
Seven years
later and without putting up security, the liquidators served a
notice of bar on the bank in July 2022, requiring the
bank to file
its plea. This led to another notice to remove cause of complaint in
terms of Rule 30(2)(b).
[8]
[14]
In 2022 the amended pages were uploaded to CaseLines as if the
amendment had been effected.
[15]
Also in
2022 an unsigned document were uploaded
[9]
to CaseLines that purports to be a notice dated in November 2011 and
signifying compliance with the order to put up security, by
reference
to an undertaking ‘marked “A”’. There is
however no annexure marked “A” and the bank’s
representatives say that had never seen such a notice during the
years 2011 to 2022.
[16]
In August
2022 the bank was informed that a Trust
[10]
had taken over the litigation from the liquidators and intended to
pursue the litigation in the name of the liquidators in terms
of
section 32(1)(b)
of the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
.
[11]
The indemnity agreement between the Trust and the Receiver of Rollco
in terms of which the Trust took over the litigation was entered
into
during February 2021.
[12]
[17]
The bank complains that it is prejudiced by the liquidators’
failure to put up security and to
pursue the litigation for 11 years
during which the matter was largely dormant. The passage of time
unavoidably leads to evidence
becoming more difficult to preserve and
memories becoming hazy.
[18]
On 19
October 2022 the Trust, now in the shoes of the liquidators, filed a
guarantee.
[13]
This was done
in response to the bank’s application in terms of
Rule 47(4).
The guarantee is a revocable one; it contains the following clause:
“
We
reserve the right to withdraw from this guarantee by giving you 3
months’ written notice in advance of our intention to
do so,
calculated from the date of the notice. You may, however, claim under
the guarantee during the notice period mentioned herein
from the date
that such notice is given.”
[19]
The bank rejected the guarantee on the ground that it is a revocable
guarantee and for other reasons.
The guarantee also suffers from the
shortcoming that it is dependent on the furnishing of a certified
copy of the Registrar’s
determination. There is none –
the determination was made in the Court order itself. Furthermore,
the original document was
never furnished to the bank and in terms of
paragraph 5 of the document payment would only be made upon surrender
of the guarantee.
[20]
The Trust
filed an answering affidavit on 24 October 2022.
[14]
It is conceded that the liquidators had failed in their obligations
to the general body of creditors, and that the liquidators
had acted
in a haphazard, dilatory, and careless manner.
[21]
The liquidators did not proceed with the litigation even though the
Trust was in contact with them
and made enquiries. The Trust
requested the liquidators to pursue the litigation since 2015 and in
2019 the Trust actively began
taking steps to take over the
litigation.
[22]
The Trust was hamstrung by the incomplete record on CaseLines and did
not have a full set of pleadings
and other documents to hand. It came
to the notice of the Trust at a late stage that security had not been
furnished by the liquidators.
Prescription
[23]
The following dates are relevant to the defence of prescription:
23.1
January 2008: Payment that later gave rise to the action made to the
bank;
23.2
11 February 2008: Rollco placed in provisional liquidation;
23.3
13 February 2008: Provisional liquidators appointed;
23.4
18 March 2008: The liquidators demand payment from the bank;
23.5
13 April 2011: Summons served.
[24]
The
three-year
[15]
prescription
period is applicable. Prescription begins to run when the debt is
due.
[16]
This principle is
subject to three
[17]
provisos
referred to in section 12(1) of the Prescription Act: Section 12(3)
and (4) reads as follows:
(2)
If the debtor wilfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of
the existence of the debt, prescription shall not commence
to run
until the creditor becomes aware of the existence of the debt.
(3)
A debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge
of the identity of the debtor and of the facts from which
the debt
arises: Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such
knowledge if he could have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care.
[25]
Prescription is delayed under certain circumstances listed in section
13 of the Act. Subsection (1)
lists a number of impediments to the
running of prescription and provides that when the period of
prescription would, but for the
provisions of the subsection, be
completed before or on, or within one year after, the day on which
the relevant impediment has
ceased to exist, the period of
prescription shall not be completed before a year has elapsed after
the day on which the impediment
ceased to exist.
[26]
Section 14 of the Act provides for interruption of prescription by
acknowledgement of debt and the
judicial interruption of prescription
is dealt with in section 15. When prescription is still running,
service of process interrupts
prescription provided the proceedings
are prosecuted to finality.
[27]
The liquidators demanded payment from the bank on 18 March 2008. In
the absence of any explanation
to the contrary they knew of the debt
on that date, and the debt prescribed by the latest on 17 March 2011.
[28]
In
paragraphs 12.5 and 26
[18]
of
the founding affidavit the bank make pertinent averments regarding
prescription. The averments are not dealt with at all in
paragraph 65
and 75.2
[19]
of the answering
affidavit that constitute the response to paragraphs 9 to 13 and 26
of the founding affidavit. The averments made
by the bank are
unanswered save for a bland statement:
“
I
deny that the claim has prescribed.”
[29]
It was argued that the dispute should be properly raised in a plea
and that the matter of prescription
cannot be ventilated without both
versions being before the Court. Prescription is “
firmly
denied.”
The liquidators point out that the bank never
filed a plea in eleven years but the answer to this point of
criticism is that they
did not file a plea because the action was
stayed by an order of court.
[30]
The denial
is therefore a bald denial and the deponent failed to deal with the
point of substance. It was also argued on behalf
of the Trust that
prescription “
has
been merely alleged.”
This
statement in the heads is clearly incorrect when regard is had to
paragraph 12.5 of the bank’s affidavit.
[20]
[31]
When the facts indicate that a claim is prescribed there is an
evidentiary onus, an onus of rebuttal,
on the party denying
prescription to show that the debt did not prescribe. In a matter
such as this it is necessary to allege the
facts that, if accepted at
trial when evidence can be led, rebuts the inference that the debt
arose more than three years before
summons was served, or that the
debt was admitted, or that prescription was delayed. The Trust chose
not to do so.
[32]
It is not the case for the Trust that there is (or even might be) be
a defence to the prescription
defence but that they do not have
access to the facts or records that support the defence.
[33]
The only possible inference is that the claim is prescribed.
Supplementary
affidavit
[34]
The Trust
filed a supplementary affidavit on 11 January 2023 and applied for
the necessary leave to do so.
[21]
The application is made on the basis that it is a response to
information that only came to the Trust’s knowledge when the
replying affidavit
[22]
was
perused. The response is limited to paragraphs 18 and 20 of the
bank’s replying affidavit.
[35]
In
paragraph 62 of the answering affidavit reference is made to the
guarantee that was filed.
[23]
The bank responded in paragraphs 18 and 20 of the replying affidavit.
The deponent to the supplementary answering affidavit referred
to the
filing notice referring to an undertaking of 2011 that is in fact not
attached
[24]
to the notice,
but is referred to already in the bank’s founding affidavit. It
was uploaded to CaseLines on behalf of the
Trust in July 2022 and was
known before the answering affidavit was filed.
[36]
The Trust’s attorneys received payment of the amount of
R300 000 from the Trust but could
not pay the amount directly to
the Registrar of the Court. A bank guarantee was required and was
obtained. When the guarantee proved
unacceptable to the bank, they
wrote to the bank to enquire about the perceived shortcomings but no
reply was received. Instead
the guarantee and its shortcomings were
addressed in the replying affidavit. In response, the deponent states
that the guarantee
of October 2022 is satisfactory.
[37]
There is no facts in the supplementary affidavit that constitute
evidence that only came known after
filing of the answering affidavit
but what the Trust says that the averments became relevant only when
the replying affidavit was
read. The legal arguments raised,
particularly the adequacy of the guarantee of October 2022, could of
course be raised legitimately
as the arguments were based on evidence
already before Court.
[38]
The supplementary affidavit therefore not only dealt with evidence
known when the answering affidavit
was filed, but added nothing to
the legal arguments already at the disposal of the Trust.
[39]
The bank
filed a replying affidavit
[25]
to the supplementary answering affidavit.
[40]
No case is made out to receive the supplementary affidavits in
evidence. They take the matter no further,
and the application is
dismissed in terms of the order made above.
Conclusion
[41]
The liquidators were ordered to put up security by November 2011.
They never did. Eleven years later
the Trust, having stepped into the
shoes of the liquidators who are now nominal plaintiffs, delivered a
copy of a revocable ‘guarantee’
with many shortcomings.
Even if one were to postulate a situation that when the Trust stepped
into the shoes of the liquidators
they were required to remedy past
shortcomings
inter alia
by putting up security and delivering
a guarantee within ten days, the did not do so. They have not done so
many months later.
[42]
It is common cause on the affidavits that the liquidators failed in
their obligations to the general
body of creditors, and that they
liquidators acted haphazardly, dilatory, and carelessly, and in a
dilatory manner. The Trust,
now litigating in the name of the
liquidators and clothed in their clothes, cannot completely distance
themselves from events before
they became involved.
[43]
The bank seeks a
de bonis proprius cost
order against the
liquidators on the basis that their failure to put up security and
prosecute the matter to finality amounts to
dereliction of duty. The
only reason why such an order is not granted, is because the Trust
may be held liable for the costs
de bonis proprius.
An
attorney and client cost order is however justified because of the
way in which the liquidators dealt with the matter over more
than a
decade.
[44]
I therefore make the order in paragraph 1 above.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
20 MARCH 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT: C
VAN DER LINDE
INSTRUCTED
BY: DU
TOIT – SANCHEZ – MOODLEY INC
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS: J P PRETORIUS
INSTRUCTED
BY: ZAYEED
PARUK INC
DATE
OF THE HEARING: 8
MARCH 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 20
MARCH 2023
[1]
CaseLInes 011-1.
[2]
Excelsior
Meubels Beperk v Trans Unie Ontwikkelings Korporasie Beperk
1957 (1) SA 74 (T) 76D.
[3]
Cilliers AC, Loots C and Nel HC
Herbstein
and Van Winsen: Civil Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme
Court of Appeal of South Africa
5
th
ed, 2009 ch13-p4185
th
ed, 2009 ch13-p 418,
Selero
(Pty) Ltd v Chauvier
1982
(3) SA 519
(T) 522A–C. See also
Van
Loggerenberg DE and Bertelsmann E
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
RS 20, 2022, D1-633.
[4]
Western
Assurance Co v Caldwell's Trustee
1918
AD 262
at 271,
Kuiper
and Others v Benson
1984
(1) SA 474 (W)
477A,
Molala
v Minister of Law and Order and Another
1993
(1) SA 673 (W)
,
Sanford
v Haley
NO 2004 (3) SA 296 (C) par. 8.
[5]
CaseLines 011-23.
[6]
In terms of Rule 47(3) of the Uniform Rules.
[7]
CaseLines 011-24.
[8]
CaseLines 011-27.
[9]
CaseLines 011-36, 020-17.
[10]
CaseLines 011-39. Four Trusts are involved in the matter and
are referred to herein collectively as “the Trust.”
They
are the Shaukat Alli Moosa Family Trust, the Cassim Rashin Moosa
Trust, the Goolam Hoosen Moosa Trust, and the Salim Mohamed
Moosa
Trust. A trust is furthermore not a legal
persona
and the references to the Trust in this judgment is shorthand for
‘the Trustees of the Trusts,
nomine
officio.”
It
is mentioned in passing that the Trust did not provide the necessary
guarantee within ten days of stepping into the shoes of
the
liquidators.
[11]
Under such circumstances the liquidators are still the
plaintiffs, albeit that they are nominal plaintiffs. See
Volkskas
Beperk, NO v Barclays Bank (DC & O)
1955 (3) SA 104 (T).
[12]
CaseLines 011-72.
[13]
CaseLInes 012-1.
[14]
CaseLines 011-50.
[15]
Section 11(d)
of the
Prescription Act, 68 of 1969
.
[16]
Section 12(1).
[17]
The third is not relevant to this matter.
[18]
CaseLines 011-11 & 22.
[19]
CaseLines 011-66 & 70.
[20]
CaseLines 011-11.
[21]
CaseLines 020-3.
[22]
CaseLines 011-111.
[23]
CaseLInes 012-1.
[24]
Annexure A7, CaseLines 011-36, Annexure YM1, CaseLines
020-17.
[25]
CaseLines 021-3.
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