Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 278South Africa
Acacia Finance (Pty) Ltd v Sure Guard CC and Others (2012/16759) [2023] ZAGPJHC 278 (29 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Acacia Finance (Pty) Ltd v Sure Guard CC and Others (2012/16759) [2023] ZAGPJHC 278 (29 March 2023)
Acacia Finance (Pty) Ltd v Sure Guard CC and Others (2012/16759) [2023] ZAGPJHC 278 (29 March 2023)
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sino date 29 March 2023
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personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION,JOHANNESBURG
Case no.
:
2012/
16759
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
ACACIA FINANCE
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
SURE GUARD CC
UMRA OMAR
NOORMOHAMED
IRFAN
OMAR NOORMOHAMED
DEFACTO
INVESTMENTS 210 (PTY) LTD
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE
.
1
ST
RESPONDENT
2
ND
RESPONDENT
3
RD
RESPONDENT
4
TH
RESPONDENT
5
TH
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Dlamini J
Date of Request of
Reasons: 14 February 2023
Date of delivery of
reasons: 29 March 2023
These reasons are deemed
to have been delivered electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives via email and
the same shall be uploaded onto the
caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI J
[1]
On
5 September 2022, I made the draft order marked “X” an
order of the court. Below, are my reasons for that order.
[2]
This
an application wherein the applicant seeks monetary judgment coupled
with an order declaring an immovable property specially
executable. A
conditional prayer for rectification of the Agreement to reflect the
correct title deed number for Erf [...]. A costs
order against the
first to fourth respondents for the present application. Finally, an
order awarding costs on an attorney and
client scale against the
fourth respondent only, for the unopposed application under case
number 85936/2018 before Malungana
AJ, in which the
registration of the fourth respondent was reinstated.
[3] The first to fourth
respondents have launched a counter-application in which they seek an
order setting aside the registration
of the covering mortgage bond
attached to the founding affidavit as annexure "JK5" over
the immovable property known
as Erf [...] Claudius Ext 1 Township.
[4]
The
applicant is ACACIA Finance (Pty) Ltd, a company duly registered and
incorporated in terms of the company laws of the Republic
Of South
Africa.
[5]
The
first respondent is Sure Guard CC, a close corporation duly
registered and incorporated in terms of the company laws of the
Republic of South Africa.
[6]
The
second respondent is Umra Omar Noormohamed, an adult female
businesswoman.
[7]
The
third respondent is Irfan Omar Noordmohamed, an adult businessman.
[8]
The
fourth respondent is De Facto Investments 210 (PTY) Ltd, a company
duly registered and incorporated in terms of the company
laws of
South Africa.
[9]
The
applicant testified that on or about 17 October 2013, the applicant
entered into a written Settlement Agreement with the first
to fourth
respondents (the Settlement Agreement). On 16 October 2013, the
Settlement Agreement was made an order of the Court.
[10]
The
material terms of the Settlement Agreement are as follows;-
10.1
the respondents acknowledged their indebtedness to the applicant
and undertook to repay the debt in various monthly
installments,
including the applicant's
legal costs.
10.2
that
in the event that the respondents breach any of the obligations
in the Settlement Agreement, the applicant will be
entitled to proceed with
the execution
steps against the respondent's property more fully
described
as Erf [...] Claudius Extension, registration division J.R.
Province of Gauteng.
[11]
It is the applicant’s case that the
respondents failed to make consistent payments in terms of the
Settlement Agreement and
that since 29 November 2016, the respondents
have failed to make any further payments whatsoever to the applicant.
[12]
It is the applicant's case that once the
Settlement Agreement was made an order of Court until the Order has
been varied and set
aside, the Order stands. Therefore according to
the applicant, the prescription period attached to the Order is 30
(thirty) years
and not 3 (three) years as contended by the
respondents.
[13]
As a result of the failure of the respondents to
honour the Settlement Agreement, the applicant avers that it launched
this application.
[14]
In their reply, the respondents argue that there
are massive irresolvable disputes of facts on the papers. That the
applicant should
have foreseen the massive factual disputes and
should not have approached this Court on application. As a result,
avers the respondents
that they seek an order that the application be
dismissed with costs.
[15]
The question to be answered therefore is whether
there exist material disputes of facts in this matter, in such a way
that this
court will be unable to determine this application as it
stands.
[16]
The principles of determining whether the exists
material disputes of facts are now well established and have been
pronounced upon
in several Courts decision.
[17]
In
Plascon -Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) the Court set out this principle as follows; “
In
certain cases, the denial by the respondent of a fact alleged by the
applicant may not be such as to raise real, genuine or bona
fide
dispute of fact
. The Court pertinently
stated that far-fetched allegations by the respondent should be
rejected on the papers.
[18]
In motion proceedings, a final order can only be
granted if the facts alleged in the respondent's affidavit coupled
with those alleged
in the applicant’s affidavit which has been
admitted or denied by the respondent, permit such relief.
[19]
Motion proceedings by their very nature are about
the resolution of legal disputes based upon common cause facts; they
are not designed
to determine probabilities, NDPP v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA
277
(SCA) at 291 A.
MATERIAL DISPUTES OF
FACTS
[20]
Below, I will deal in seriatim with the
respondent's submission to determine whether material disputes of
facts do exist in this
application.
BRINGING THE
APPLICATION UNDER 2020 CASE NUMBER
[21]
The applicant has brought this application under
two case numbers. In this regard, the applicant alleges that both
these matters
have been settled around 2013, and the Settlement
Agreement was made an order of the court on 16 October 2013.
[22]
In this regard, the respondents submit that the
applicant cannot revive the two matters which became settled under
the Settlement
Agreement and it is thus irregular to bring the
application under the case numbers of two matters which have been
settled by a
Settlement Agreement.
[23]
Therefore, argues the respondents that the if it
was to be the applicant’s case that the respondents did not
comply with the
Settlement Agreement and the applicant sought
enforcement of the Settlement Agreement, then in that event the
applicant should
have utilized a new case number for that
application.
[24]
In reply, the applicant argues that the reason
that the case number was used for the present application is based on
the fact that
the first to fourth respondents defaulted in terms of a
Settlement Agreement that was made an order of the Court under the
same
case numbers. The applicant's explanation is plausible. In any
event, there exists nothing in the Uniform Rules of Court and the
Court's practice directive prohibiting the applicant from proceeding
under the same case numbers.
PRESCRIPTIVE PERIOD
[25]
On this aspect, the respondents insist that there
was never any suretyship signed by the company and in that context,
the registered
covering mortgage bond is only an instrument of
security and not the form of the indebtedness itself.
[26]
The respondents argue that the mortgage bond is
one registered over a property of a surety and not a mortgage bond
given by the
principal debtor, the debt is not one secured by a
mortgage bond and as a result, the prescriptive period is only three
years.
Therefore the debt has also become prescribed as the
prescription period in the present circumstances is three years and
not thirty
years.
[27]
There is no merit in the respondent's argument.
The applicant is pursuing this application on the basis of the
Settlement Agreement
that was made an order of the Court. It is an
established principle of our law that unless varied or rescinded,
court orders are
binding on the respondents. The result is that the
debt on which this application is based is premised on a judgment
debt, accordingly
the requisite period of prescription is 30 years
and not 3 years as submitted by the respondents.
RECTIFICATION
[28]
In so far as the rectification sought by the
applicant, the respondents submit that no order for rectification was
sought by the
applicant in its notice of Motion and second that
rectification should be sought by way of action and not an
application.
[29]
In my view, there is no merit to the respondent’s
contention. The rectification sought by the applicants is not a
substantial
rectification that necessitates a separate stand-alone
application. What is sought to be rectified is a minor typographical
error
in the number of the title deed. Rectification is accordingly
granted.
FULL AND FINAL
SETTLEMENT
[30]
The respondents insist that it has made several
payments to the applicant. According to the respondents when the last
payment was
made, it was specifically agreed with the applicant that
the payment would be in full and final settlement of whatever amount
may
still be owed under the Settlement Agreement.
[31]
In reply, the applicant argues that it never
intended and never absolve the respondents of their indebtedness by
receipt of the
payment of R200 000.00.
[32]
In my view, the respondent’s contention
lacks merit. The respondents do not indicate who acted on behalf of
the applicant
when this full and final settlement offer was made.
Significantly, the respondents do not indicate whether the full and
final settlement
was oral or in writing. The Settlement Agreement was
reduced to writing and signed by both parties. It will thus be
excepted that
the alleged offer in full and final settlement should
have been reduced to writing especially in light of the existence of
the
non-variation clause in the Settlement Agreement. Absent a signed
variation agreement, the respondent's contentions in this regard
are
dismissed.
CASH PAYMENTS.
[33]
On several occasions, the respondents allege that
they had made various cash payments to the applicant. On this score,
the respondents
are uncertain whether the applicant did subtract
these cash payments and the respondents doubt whether the aforesaid
cash payments
were properly captured by the applicant.
[34]
Further that the respondents gave several air
conditioning units to the applicant, and the intention was that the
value of these
air conditions would also be subtracted from the debt.
[35]
This contention is specifically denied by the
applicant that it received certain cash payments from the respondents
and that it
accepted payments from the respondents in the form of air
conditioners.
[36]
The respondent's assertions in this regard are
implausible and must be dismissed. I find no basis that a company in
the business
of commercial lending would accept cash payments and air
conditioners in circumstances where the applicant is owed a
substantial
amount, part of which is secured by a covering surety
bond. Moreover, the respondents do not attach any amount or value of
the
air conditioners that they allegedly gave to the applicants.
CAPITAL AMOUNT NOT
ADVANCED.
[37]
It is the third respondent's case that the
applicant never advanced a full capital amount of R1 million to the
third respondent
but instead subtracted an amount of R250 000, 00
which according to the applicant, represented a debt owed by one Mr.
Weinstein.
[38]
The third respondent's contention in this regard
is of no moment and does not assist the third respondent. This is so
because the
applicant’s claim against the respondents is
founded on a Settlement Agreement that was made an order of the Court
and not
on the amount that was advanced by the applicant to the third
respondent.
AUTHORITY TO ENTER
INTO A SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
[39]
Finally, the respondents submit that Albert Jacobs
never had the authority and mandate to enter into the Settlement
Agreement on
behalf of the third respondent's wife – the second
respondent, and the company.
[40]
The applicant in its replying affidavit testified
that Mr. Jacobs has provided its attorneys with a letter wherein, Mr.
Jacobs,
unequivocally confirms his mandate on behalf of the
respondents, his instructions to settle, and the circumstances in
which the
Settlement Agreement was made an order of Court. The
respondents have made bald and unsubstantiated allegations in this
regard
and have not submitted any evidence in this Court to rebut
Mr. Jacobs's testimony. Accordingly, the respondent's
submission
in this regard is dismissed.
COUNTER APPLICATION
[41]
I now turn to deal with the respondent's counter
application.
[42]
In the founding papers, the respondents aver that
there is no legal basis for the existence of a mortgage bond over the
company’s
property in the sense that that the company never
signed a suretyship and further that there was no authority given on
behalf of
the company for it to be bound as surety. Finally, the
respondents submit that the debt has now been extinguished as a
result of
the effluxion of time, and as a result of the 3-year
prescriptive period, there is no longer an existing debt that can be
validity
secured by the mortgage bond.
[43]
There is no evidence before the Court to support
the respondent's contentions in this regard. The applicant's claim is
based on
a judgment debt. In terms of the law, the prescription
period for a judgment is 30 years and not 3 years as alleged by the
respondents.
Further, the only director of the fourth respondent, the
second respondent signed a power of attorney, which expressly refers
to
a resolution of the directors of the fourth respondent which
empowered the second respondent to act. It is on this basis that
caused the registration of the mortgage bond. Accordingly, the
counter-application is meritless and is dismissed.
[44]
In all the circumstances mentioned above, it is my
considered view that there exist no material disputes of facts in
this matter.
The respondents have made bald and unsubstantiated
defences. There are no bona fide defences that have been submitted by
the respondents
to oppose the applicant's claim. As result, I am
satisfied that the applicant has succeeded to establish its case and
is entitled
to the orders that it seeks.
ORDER
1.
The order marked X that I made on 5 September 2023
is made an order of this court.
DLAMINI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Request for Reasons:
14
February 2023
Delivered:
29
March 2023
For
the Applicant
Adv
D Linde
dlinde@rsabar.com
Instructed
by:
Coelho
Barata Attorneys
pedro@cb-attorneys.co.za
For
the 2
nd
and 4
th
Respondents:
Adv
R Beaton SC
Russelbea7@gmail.com
Instructed
by:
Jaffer
Incorporated
kganarek@kkinc.co.za
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