Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 291South Africa
Engen Petroleum Limited v Scheepers and Others (2020/708) [2023] ZAGPJHC 291 (3 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 April 2023
Judgment
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## Engen Petroleum Limited v Scheepers and Others (2020/708) [2023] ZAGPJHC 291 (3 April 2023)
Engen Petroleum Limited v Scheepers and Others (2020/708) [2023] ZAGPJHC 291 (3 April 2023)
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sino date 3 April 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case no: 2020/708
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
ENGEN
PETROLEUM LIMITED
Applicant
and
SCHEEPERS,
MARTHINUS JACOBUS
First
Respondent
SCHEEPERS,
ANDRIES
Second
Respondent
MAYEKISO,
FANI WILLIAM
Third
Respondent
SAIYA,
JOSEPH
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FRIEDMAN AJ:
1 In this matter, the
applicant (“Engen”) concluded an agreement for the sale
and delivery of fuel and fuel-related
products with a close
corporation called Anmarkati Verspreiders CC. The parties have
described the close corporation as “Anmar”
in the papers,
and I shall do the same.
2 Anmar breached the
agreement by failing to pay for the fuel products which it bought
from Engen. It therefore signed an Acknowledgement
of Debt (“the
AOD”) on 24 April 2019 in favour of Engen. In November 2019,
Anmar was liquidated and Engen has been
unable to recover the sum
owed to it under the AOD and a separate agreement discussed below.
The respondents each executed written
deeds of suretyship in favour
of Engen and bound themselves, jointly and severally, as sureties and
co-principal debtors for the
discharge of Anmar’s indebtedness
to Engen. When Anmar was liquidated, and Engen was unable to reclaim
the sums owed to it,
it instituted the present application.
3 There are two separate
claims encompassed in this application. The first relates directly to
the AOD. In terms of the AOD, Anmar
agreed to pay to Engen the sum of
R11 668 973.03 plus interest at 12% per annum, compounded
monthly from 1 April 2019
to date of final payment. The agreement
provided for Anmar to make six monthly payments of R2 013 462.24
each, beginning
on 30 April 2019 and continuing on the last day of
each month until the debt was paid off. Anmar made payment of the
instalments
for the first three months, but then ceased making
payments. Engen – in what it has described as Claim A –
therefore
claims what remains owing in terms of the AOD. In the
founding affidavit, it relied on a certificate of balance which shows
the
final amount owing to Engen, taking into account the interest of
12%. However, in the proceedings before me it seeks a revised sum
in
respect of claim A, reflected in an updated certificate of balance,
which demonstrates that the indebtedness in respect of claim
A is
R5 725 367.53 as of 23 July 2020. The need for this
adjustment, as explained in the replying affidavit, is that
the
liquidators of Anmar made a payment of R270 000 to Engen and a
further sum of R45 019.19 was received from one of
Anmar’s
debtors. Engen therefore claims a slightly smaller sum than reflected
in the founding affidavit, which takes account
of these payments.
4 Engen then sues on a
separate agreement which it concluded with Anmar. During and after
the period in which the AOD was signed
by Anmar, Engen continued to
supply fuel products to it. These products were supplied under the
original reseller agreement concluded
by the parties in 2015. It was
this original agreement which gave rise to the AOD, but leaving the
AOD aside, Engen continued to
supply fuel products to Anmar under the
reseller agreement both before and after the AOD was signed. The
reseller agreement provides
that a breach of the agreement by
non-payment by Anmar of the sums due for the purchase of the fuel
products would entitle Engen
to recover the outstanding sums, plus
interest at prime plus 4%. Since Anmar defaulted on its obligations
under the reseller agreement,
Engen sues the sureties for the
outstanding sum – it describes this as Claim B. At the time
when the application was launched,
prime was 10%. Engen relies on a
certificate of balance in respect of the Claim B, which demonstrates
that Anmar owes Engen R7 157 396.04
plus interest at 14%.
5 The reseller agreement
provides that a certificate of balance issued by Engen “shall
at the instance of Engen constitute
conclusive proof of the existence
of the amount of the indebtedness at that time”. It then
provides that, if this provision
is not enforceable against Anmar for
any reason, “then such certificate shall at the instance of
Engen constitute prima facie
evidence of the existence and amount of
that indebtedness at that time”. The AOD provides that a
certificate signed by a
manager of Engen “shall be sufficient
and prima facie proof of the balance outstanding under this
Acknowledgment of Debt
at any time”.
6 Each of the suretyship
agreements provides that, if Engen has to sue on the agreement, each
surety “undertakes to keep Engen
indemnified against all costs
actually incurred in connection with the enforcement of this surety,
whether or not taxed or based
on any prescribed tariff”.
7 This matter was
launched in 2020. It was initially argued before Thlothlamaje AJ but
he fell ill and was not well enough to render
a judgment. On 11
January 2023, the Deputy Judge President directed that the matter
should be reargued, which is how it came before
me. I mention this
because, although the matter is not urgent in the traditional sense,
there has been an unfortunate delay caused
through no fault of the
parties. In the meantime, interest has continued to run on the debts,
and is reaching a point where the
in duplem
rule may come into
play. I have accordingly prepared this judgment as quickly as
possible. In the circumstances, it has not been
possible for me to
deal in detail with each point raised in the papers. I confine myself
to a broad explanation of my reasons for
the order which I make
below.
8 One other point which I
should make by way of introduction: the third respondent, one of the
sureties, did not oppose this application.
An order was therefore
made against him on the unopposed roll. The present application is an
opposed application in which Engen
seeks relief against the sureties
which opposed its application; ie, the first, second and fourth
respondents. For convenience,
I shall refer to them simply as “the
respondents” below.
9 Even from the brief
discussion above, it should be clear that the strong starting point
in this matter is that Engen has made
out a case for the relief which
it seeks. Its certificates of balance substantiate the amounts
claimed – at least prima facie
– and it is common cause
that the debts secured by the sureties have not been paid. This is
the type of matter which, frankly,
would more often than not be
determined in the unopposed court.
10 But the respondents
have raised a number of defences, and it is necessary to consider
them carefully. In the discussion below,
I therefore focus almost
exclusively on the question whether any of the defences raised by the
respondents serves to dislodge the
assumption that Engen should be
granted the relief which it seeks.
11 I say “almost
exclusively” because there is one additional issue which I must
address: the respondents have brought
a strike-out application in
respect of certain allegations in Engen’s replying affidavit.
Because the issues raised by the
strike-out application are
interlinked with some of the issues relevant to the respondents’
defences, it is most convenient
for me to deal with the strike-out
application last. The approach which I adopt to the strike-out
application will, in any event,
emerge from my discussion of the
respondents’ defences.
# THE RESPONDENT’S
DEFENCES
THE RESPONDENT’S
DEFENCES
12 The respondents’
defences may broadly be broken down into the following categories:
12.1 The
respondents take an authority point, which I understand to take the
form of a contention that the deponent to the
founding affidavit, Ms
Abader, did not have authority to launch the application on behalf of
Engen.
12.2 The
respondents rely on a series of what they describe as disputes of
fact, which they wish to be referred to trial.
12.3 The
respondents raise certain constitutional issues.
# Lack of authority
Lack of authority
13 It is common cause
that no rule 7 notice was filed by the respondents in this matter.
They take the position that there was no
need to file a rule 7 notice
because they do not challenge the authority of Engen’s
attorneys to represent them in these
proceedings. Rather, they refer
to a delegation of authority attached to Engen’s replying
affidavit (after the authority
point was taken in the answering
affidavit) and contend that it does not authorise Ms Abader to depose
to affidavits or launch
this application.
14
This
argument may be discounted swiftly. In
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site v City of Johannesburg
2005
(4) SA 199
(SCA), the SCA dealt with a challenge to authority which
was not dissimilar to the point taken by the respondents in this
case.
In the founding affidavit, the deponent simply alleged that he
was “duly authorised by delegated power to bring this
application
and to make this affidavit on behalf of the applicant”.
In the answering affidavit, the respondents denied this contention
and “put the applicant to the proof thereof”. In reply,
the applicant produced a resolution of the municipal council
(ie, the
governing body of the applicant) which it alleged constituted the
evidence of the delegation. The respondents argued (as
the
respondents seek to argue in the present case) that the document did
not adequately show that the power had indeed been delegated
to the
official in question.
[1]
15
The
SCA referred to, and approved,
[2]
the decision of Flemming DJP in
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992
(2) SA 703
(W) at 705D-H, in which he said the following:
“
The care displayed
in the past about proof of authority was rational. It was inspired by
the fear that a person may deny that he
was party to litigation
carried on in his name. His signature to the process, or when that
does not eventuate, formal proof of
authority would avoid undue risk
to the opposite party, to the administration of justice and sometimes
even to his own attorney.
. . .
The developed view,
adopted in Court Rule 7(1), is that the risk is adequately managed on
a different level. If the attorney is
authorised to bring the
application on behalf of the applicant, the application necessarily
is that of the applicant. There is
no need that any other person,
whether he be a witness or someone who becomes involved
especially in the context of authority,
should additionally
be authorised. It is therefore sufficient to know whether or not
the attorney acts with authority.
As to when and how the
attorney's authority should be proved, the Rule-maker made a policy
decision. Perhaps because the risk is
minimal that an attorney will
act for a person without authority to do so, proof is dispensed with
except only if the other party
challenges the authority. See Rule
7(1).”
16
The
SCA in
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site
also
approved
[3]
the following
remarks of Flemming DJP in
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
at
706B-D:
“
If the applicant
had qualms about whether the ‘interlocutory application'' is
authorised by the respondent, that authority
had to be challenged on
the level of whether [the respondent's attorney] held empowerment.
Apart from more informal requests or
enquiries, applicant's remedy
was to use Court Rule 7(1). It was not to hand up heads of
argument, apply textual analysis
and make submissions about the
adequacy of the words used by a deponent about his own authority.”
17 In the full-bench
decision in
ANC Umvoti Council Caucus v Umvoti Municipality
2010 (3) SA 31
(KZP), Gorven J (as he then was) considered these
authorities carefully (see paragraphs 14 to 27) and concluded that
(at paragraph
28):
“
absent a specific
challenge by way of rule 7(1), 'the mere signature of the notice of
motion by an attorney and the fact that the
proceedings purport to be
brought in the name of the applicant' is sufficient. It is further my
view that the application papers
are not the correct context in which
to determine whether an applicant which is an artificial person has
authorised the initiation
of application proceedings. Rule 7(1)
must be used.”
18 Having made these
remarks, Gorven J rejected the argument of counsel for the appellants
that a party wishing to challenge authority
of a company to launch
litigation has an election as to whether to use rule 7. He held that
the only vehicle through which a litigant
may raise a challenge based
on lack of authority is through rule 7(1) of the Uniform Rules (at
paragraph 28).
19 These cases constitute
the complete answer to the respondents’ challenge to Ms
Abader’s authority. It is misdirected
and, since no rule 7(1)
notice was filed, cannot succeed.
# Disputes of fact
Disputes of fact
20 The respondents have
raised the following issues, which they say constitute disputes of
fact which should be referred to trial:
20.1 First, they
refer to the fact that, before Anmar was liquidated, Engen took
cession of Anmar’s entire debtor’s
book. However, the
only sum which Engen was able to recover from Anmar’s debtors
was the R45 019.19 which I mentioned
in paragraph 3 above. The
respondents argue that “acceptance of a receipt of a mere
R45 109.19 from a debtor’s
book totalling over R13 000 000
is unfathomable and is indicative of a will to hold the respondents
personally liable
failing all else.” Despite making this
statement – which, while ascribing an improper motive to Engen,
appears to accept
the factual premise that only R45 019.19 was
recovered – the respondents then seem to dispute the total
amount recovered
from debtors, which in turn (they say) triggers a
dispute of fact about the total amount outstanding in relation to
Anmar’s
(and therefore their) debt to Engen. They seem also to
suggest that the matter should be referred to trial so that Anmar’s
liquidators may be joined (presumably as defendants, although this is
not spelled out) and “so that the Honourable Court
can have
sight of the Final Liquidation and Distribution account”.
20.2 Secondly, the
respondents refer to the fact that Engen took cession of movable
assets, via a notarial bond, in an amount
of R1 350 000.
They criticise the explanation given in the replying affidavit that
the liquidators were able only to
recover R270 000 for the
benefit of Engen from the sale of “an undisclosed number of
vehicles”. Part of the criticism
appears to be that the
allegation was made in reply. But the main criticism is that the
respondents do not appear to accept the
word of Engen that it
received only R270 000 from the liquidators and say that it is
the liquidators of Anmar which should
be providing this evidence.
20.3 Thirdly, the
respondents raise a number of complaints, some of which are hard to
follow, about the quantification of
the sums owing. The most notable
relates to interest. They criticise the fact that “Engen claims
a combined balance of R13 197 782.80
in paragraph 19, yet
charges 2 different rates of interest, namely 12% p.a. from 1 April
2019 and 14% from 30 September 2019 on
Sub-balances which I showed
above to be clearly wrong”. (The reference to paragraph 19, is
to paragraph 19 of the founding
affidavit.)
20.4 Fourthly, the
respondents have another criticism relating to the question of
interest. It will be recalled from my brief
discussion of the facts
above that the claim relating to the AOD stems from the fact that
Anmar undertook to repay the amount outstanding
at the time by making
six equal payments of roughly R2m each. They paid three out of the
six, but not the other three. So, the
claim against the respondents
based on the AOD is for the outstanding capital amount reflected in
the roughly R6m in unpaid instalments,
plus interest. As far as I
understand the respondents’ complaint, they say that the
intention of the parties was for interest
to be included in each of
the instalments. They therefore say (again, as far as I understand
the contention correctly) that the
certificate of balance inflates
the indebtedness of the respondents by roughly R400 000. It appears
that the discrepancy arises
from the fact that Engen’s
certificate of balance is based on the fact that interest is
“compounded monthly from 01
April 2019 to date of payment”,
to use the wording of the AOD.
21 The respondents say in
their heads of argument that they have raised 8 disputes of fact. I
have summarised the main ones. The
remaining ones overlap with, or
are closely related to, the main complaints listed above and do not
need to be considered separately.
# The proper approach to
the disputes of fact
The proper approach to
the disputes of fact
22 Rule 6(5)(g) provides
that, “where an application cannot properly be decided on
affidavit the court may dismiss the application
or make such order as
it deems fit with a view to ensuring a just and expeditious
decision.” One of the orders that a court
may make to ensure a
just and expeditious decision is to refer the matter to trial. The
respondents have not relied on rule 6(5)(g)
expressly in their
answering affidavits or heads of argument. However, they have
repeatedly suggested that there are irresolvable
disputes of fact on
the papers, which warrant the matter being referred to trial. So, the
stance taken by them brings rule 6(5)(g)
into play.
23
In
Lombaard
,
[4]
an application was brought in the High Court by Mr Lombaard to
transfer certain immovable property to him. His application failed
and he appealed to the SCA. There was no application in the High
Court for the matter to be referred for the hearing of oral evidence
or to trial. The High Court simply determined the matter on the
papers. But, in the SCA, a debate arose as to whether the matter
ought to have been, and therefore should now be, referred to oral
evidence. The majority of the SCA held that a proper factual
basis
for a defence had been set out in the answering affidavit and had not
been addressed by the applicant (now appellant) in
his replying
affidavit. In holding that it would not be appropriate to refer the
matter to oral evidence – and that, instead,
it was appropriate
for the SCA to confirm that the application was rightly dismissed by
the High Court – the SCA said the
following:
“
An
order to refer a matter to oral evidence presupposes a genuine
dispute of fact (
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty)
Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T)
at 1163;
Ripoll-Dausa
v Middleton NO and others
2005 (3) SA 141
(C)
at 151F ff [also reported at
[2005]
2 All SA 83
(C)
– Ed]). The appellant chose not to respond to the factual
allegations concerning rectification. He did so at his peril
. .
.”
[5]
24
There
are several ways in which the
Lombaard
matter
is distinguishable from the present case. But, I have referred to
Lombaard
because it is helpful in
the following respect: when there are genuine disputes of fact, the
court will normally dismiss an application
in circumstances where the
applicant ought reasonably to have anticipated them.
[6]
However, before a court even enters into an enquiry as to whether the
applicant ought to have anticipated that there would be genuine
disputes of fact on the papers, it has to be convinced that there are
genuine disputes of fact on the papers in the first place.
If there
are not, no purpose would be served in referring the matter for the
hearing of oral evidence or trial under rule 6(5)(g).
Rather, the
result of the application will be determined largely by the question
of which party has failed to raise a genuine dispute
of fact: if it
is the respondent, then the application would normally be granted on
the basis of the principles expressed in
Plascon-Evans
.
[7]
If it is the applicant – which would arise in circumstances
such as in
Lombaard
when the applicant fails
to address a genuine factual defence put up in the answering
affidavit – then the application would
simply be dismissed.
25 To determine that
there is a genuine dispute of facts, it is necessary to consider the
allegations in the affidavits of each
side and ask: if the
allegations made in the papers of each side turn out, with the
leading of oral evidence, to be true, would
they disclose a cause of
action or defence? To give an easy example (and let us leave aside
that an applicant would be most unlikely
to bring a claim of this
nature on application): a particular applicant sues a respondent for
R500 000 in delict for intentional
damage to property. In her
founding affidavit, she gives a detailed narrative of how the
respondent caused extensive damage to
the applicant’s car. In
the respondent’s answering affidavit, he gives a detailed
narrative of how he had nothing to
do with the damage and was out of
the country at the time. If the applicant’s version is true,
she must win. If the respondent’s
version is true, he must win.
This is a genuine dispute of fact.
26 On the other hand, a
genuine dispute of fact will not even be triggered if the respondent
puts up a version saying something
along the lines of: the applicant
is wrong when she says that I destroyed her car with a hammer, I
actually did it with explosives.
Yes, the parties may have different
factual versions as to what actually happened. But, on either of
their versions, the applicant
must win.
27 Therefore, it seems to
me that a court faced with a rule 6(5)(g) application should ask the
following questions:
27.1 Is there a
genuine dispute of facts on the papers?
27.2 If there is,
then the next question is: ought the applicant to have anticipated
these disputes of fact when launching
the application? If the answer
to that is yes, then ordinarily the court would dismiss the
application.
27.3 If the
applicant cannot have anticipated that disputes of fact would arise,
or there is some other compelling consideration,
the court would then
ask whether it is in the interests of justice for the matter to be
referred to trial or for a referral to
oral evidence in respect of a
discrete topic to be made. This will depend on the facts of each
case.
# Application of these
principles to the respondents’ case
Application of these
principles to the respondents’ case
28 In my view, the second
and third questions do not even arise in this case. For the reasons
given below, I do not believe that
there is a genuine dispute of fact
on the papers. In my view, the respondents have not adduced any facts
which case doubt on the
case as framed by Engen in its founding
affidavit.
29 It is convenient to
distinguish between the various criticisms advanced by the
respondents as to the manner of the calculation
of the quantum, on
the one hand, and their criticisms relating to the alternatives to
recover Engen’s indebtedness (ie, the
assumption that
insufficient information about the liquidation account is available
and the arguments relating to the cession of
movables), on the other.
30 As to the quantum:
30.1 As noted
above, when it comes to the reseller agreement, the certificate of
balance is “conclusive proof”
of the counter-party’s
indebtedness. But, to cater for the possibility that that rule is
unenforceable against the debtor,
the reseller agreement provides,
essentially in the alternative, that the certificate of balance
constitutes prima facie proof
of the debtor’s indebtedness.
30.2 When it comes
to the AOD, a certificate of balance is prima facie proof of the
debtor’s indebtedness.
31 The alternative
included in the reseller agreement was clearly inserted to cater for
a finding that the “conclusive proof”
clause was contrary
to public policy. In
Ex Parte Minister of Justice: In Re Nedbank v
Abstein Distributors (Pty) Ltd
1995 (3) SA 1
(A), the Appellate
Division (as it then was) held that such clauses are indeed contrary
to public policy because they preclude
the debtor from being able to
challenge the quantum said to be owing. Although he did not refer to
any of these cases, it is probably
for this reason that
Mr Aucamp
,
who appeared for Engen, quite properly did not try to argue that the
certificate of balance in respect of the reseller agreement
was
conclusive proof of the respondents’ indebtedness. It seems
clear from the caselaw that the prima facie standard must
be
applicable to both agreements.
32 That being the case,
the applicable approach is this: the certificates of balance
constitute evidence of the respondents’
indebtedness so that,
without a cogent explanation from the respondents as to why they are
incorrect for any reason, effect must
be given to them.
33 In this case, the
respondents have not given any cogent explanation of what is wrong
with what is reflected in the certificates.
The attack based on the
interest applied to each debt, and the different interest rates, is
clearly misplaced. When it comes to
the interest on the AOD, the
agreement makes clear that interest is to be charged at a rate of 12%
per annum,
compounded monthly
from 1 April 2019 until payment.
The capital amount recorded in the AOD was R11 668 973.03.
What this means is that interest
would be charged at a rate of 12%
p.a. on this amount, but would be compounded monthly until the debt
was discharged. This makes
it clear that the respondents’
argument that the three instalments which Anmar paid included all of
the interest envisaged
by the AOD- so that no further interest could
be charged – is unsustainable. The clear implication of the
agreement is that
interest would continue to run – on the
formula described above – until the full outstanding amount was
paid. It is
common cause that the three payments by Anmar did not
extinguish its indebtedness under the AOD, so interest continued to
run on
the balance owing.
34 When it comes to the
fact that interest is charged at different rates – this
self-evidently relates to the different interest
rates applicable to
the reseller agreement, on the one hand, and the AOD on the other.
35 As to the more
substantive question of whether sufficient information about
alternatives to calling on the suretyship has been
provided:
35.1 In simple
terms, the respondents seek to trigger a dispute of fact by saying
that there is insufficient evidence as
to (a) why Engen did not
recover more from the liquidation of Anmar and (b) why the cession of
movables worth more than R1m recovered
so little.
35.2 Engen did not
deal with either of these issues in the founding affidavit,
presumably because it did not consider it
necessary to do so. It
simply pleaded the terms of the agreements and the fact that Anmar
had been placed into liquidation and
could not, therefore, repay the
two debts (ie, under Claim A and Claim B). It then pleaded the terms
of the suretyship agreements
signed by each of the respondents, and
explained why, on the basis of those agreements, it was entitled to
the relief sought. In
short, Engen’s founding affidavit
contains all of the necessary averments to sustain its cause of
action in this matter.
35.3 In the
answering affidavit, the respondents raised the disputes which I have
summarised above. Therefore, Engen dealt
with the complaints raised
by the respondents in its replying affidavit. It explained that Engen
took cession of Anmar’s
entire debtor’s book, which stood
at R13 263 077.36 as of 30 October 2019. It also held
further security in the
form of a special notarial bond to the value
of R1.9m in relation to Anmar’s indebtedness to Engen. Engen
explained that
a large component of Anmar’s debt was owed to it
by a company called Laduma Liquid Company, which the deponent to the
replying
affidavit describes as a related entity to Anmar. The
replying affidavit explains, with reference to emails exchanged at
the relevant
time (ie, October 2019), that Engen had reason to
believe that the respondents were obstructing its ability to call on
the book
debt, by encouraging debtors of Anmar to make payments to
alternative bank accounts (ie, to bypass the need to repay the sums
owing
by them to Engen, as the holder of the debt in terms of the
cession).
35.4 The replying
affidavit was filed in August 2020. Rather than seeking to file a
further affidavit to respond to these
allegations, the respondents
elected to seek to strike out these allegations from the replying
affidavit. I return briefly below
to deal with the strike-out
application. But at this stage I may simply note that there is
nothing before me to contradict what
Engen says about its inability
to recover Anmar’s book debt. And, at the risk of repetition, I
again emphasise that the starting
assumption is that Engen had an
unqualified right to call on the suretyships after Anmar failed to
repay the debts which it owed
to Engen.
35.5 If the
respondents wished to make something of Engen’s inability to
recover the debt owing to Anmar from other
sources – to the
extent that that issue is relevant at all to Engen’s
entitlement to relief in these proceedings –
then they had to
place facts before this Court to explain their complaint. As it turns
out, they have put no evidence whatsoever
before this Court on that
subject and have failed to put up any version in response to Engen’s
hard-hitting allegations about
attempts to obstruct it from
recovering from Anmar’s debtors.
35.6 Engen has
also said under oath in the replying affidavit that it only managed
to recover a small fraction of the amount
owing to it, from the
liquidation account of Anmar. It makes the point that, under the
suretyship agreement, it has the unqualified
right to claim from the
respondents. It nevertheless explains that it recovered only R270 000
from the liquidation of Anmar.
Importantly, the respondents have,
again, failed to provide any basis for me to go behind what Engen
says in this regard.
Mr Webbstock,
who appeared for the
respondents, was constrained to argue that this matter should be sent
to trial so that the liquidators can
be joined or called as witnesses
to explain why Engen was able to recover so little from Anmar’s
liquidation. But there is
simply no legal basis for me to take such a
course of action. Engen, as it was entitled to do, proceeded in this
matter by way
of motion proceedings because it did not anticipate
material disputes of fact to arise in relation to its cause of
action. And
what the discussion above demonstrates is that none did
arise. It must be accepted as the starting point that Engen had the
unqualified
right to call on the respondents to make good Anmar’s
debt. Therefore, in the absence of any evidence to demonstrate that
Engen somehow behaved in an unconscionable way in relation to the
suretyship agreement (by, for instance, deliberately failing
to make
good on the security that it held), by simply annexing the suretyship
agreement and the relevant certificates of balance,
Engen’s
cause of action was adequately established.
36 It follows from what I
have said above that there are no genuine disputes of fact on the
papers. The respondents have not pointed
to any reasons to discount
the version advanced by Engen in its founding affidavit. When it
comes to the question of quantum, the
respondents have not done
anything to undermine the certificates of balance or to dislodge the
prima facie assumption that the
sums reflected in them are an
accurate statement of the respondents’ indebtedness. It follows
that, unless the respondents’
constitutional challenge
(addressed next), has any merit, Engen’s claim must succeed.
# Constitutional issues
Constitutional issues
37 The respondents have
filed a rule 16A notice in which they set out extensive grounds on
which it is contended that
sections 4(1)(a)(i)
,
4
(1)(b) and
4
(2)(c)
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
are unconstitutional.
38 In the heads of
argument filed for the respondents, this point was pressed. But the
respondents also advanced a separate argument,
essentially to the
effect that certain provisions of the suretyship agreement are
unconstitutional. It is, with respect, not an
easy task to follow the
constitutional argument set out in the heads of argument. But, as far
as I can discern, the argument boils
down to the following
propositions (a) fairness is a constitutional value (b) some of the
terms of the suretyship agreement are
draconian and (c) the
suretyships offend the rule of law and create a form of strict
liability which permits self-help.
39 In argument, I
directed
Mr Webbstock
to the provisions of rule 10A of the
Uniform Rules. Since he accepted that the Minister who administers
the
National Credit Act (being
the Minister of Trade, Industry and
Competition) had not been joined to these proceedings, he had to
accept that he could not advance
his challenge to the various
provisions of
section 4
of the
National Credit Act. He
did persist in
the remaining constitutional claims, but they appeared to transform
somewhat. If I understood the argument in the
hearing,
Mr
Webbstock’s
submission was that there was a prima facie
case that the suretyship agreements were in conflict with the
Constitution and that
this issue should be referred to trial.
# Does the
constitutional complaint have merit?
Does the
constitutional complaint have merit?
40 The procedure followed
by the respondents on the constitutional leg of their case was
defective from beginning to end. The respondents
took the effort to
file a rule 16A notice, but did not join the Minister as a respondent
to the litigation. I have not dwelled
on the contents of the rule 16A
notice because I cannot entertain the attack on section 4 of the NCA,
but I may simply remark that
the substantive constitutional attacks
summarised in the notice are hard to follow and lack coherence. The
same applies to the
formulation of the complaint in the answering
affidavit and the heads of argument. Statements are made such as:
“very few
sureties actually contemplate or anticipate as a fait
accompli that they will in fact be performing the debtor’s
obligation
since that will probably amount to some form of donation
rather than to the giving of security”. Or, “where the
termination
of a continuing suretyship is within the exclusive
discretion of the creditor, as is the case in this matter, the
surety’s
position is somewhat insecure, especially if the
obligations undertaken by the surety are of the widest possible
nature regarding
the principal debtor’s indebtedness or the
obligations for which the surety undertakes liability as well as in
regard to
the duration of the suretyship”. But the link between
these statements and any applicable provisions of the Constitution is
never explained.
41 In fairness to the
respondents, and reading their papers and heads of argument very
generously, the high watermark of their constitutional
attack seems
to be the following proposition: a suretyship will be
“disproportional” where “that part of the
surety’s
income which is not subject to distress, is insufficient to cover the
monthly interest rate” and that this
is an issue which must be
referred to trial.
42 As I have already
intimated in dealing with the respondents’ arguments based on
disputes of fact above, the general approach
of the respondents is to
imply that there are complex factual matters which can only be
resolved in due course at a trial, without
ever precisely formulating
what they are. And, more importantly, without laying a proper factual
foundation for the premise, in
their answering affidavit. If the
individual financial position of the respondents is seen by them to
be relevant to the constitutional
attack, then it is not sufficient
for them simply to ask for the matter to go to trial. They were
required to set out a detailed
version of the facts in their
answering affidavit which they considered to be relevant to their
constitutional cause of action.
43
Mr
Webbstock
referred
to the seminal decision of the Constitutional Court in
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007
(5) SA 323
(CC) in his heads of argument. He did not, either in his
heads of argument, or in argument before me, characterise his case in
the way envisaged by
Barkhuizen
–
ie, by arguing
that the suretyship agreement, or parts of it, are contrary to public
policy because they are inconsistent with the
values of the
Constitution.
[8]
However, if one
approaches the argument generously, that would seem to be the
respondents’ case. They say on more than one
occasion that the
suretyship is unfair, oppressive and one-sided. They say that
fairness is a constitutional value. Clearly, they
attempt to bring
themselves within the test envisaged by
Barkhuizen
.
44 The difficulty is that
the respondents have not, other than referring to a general standard
of fairness, referred to any concrete
constitutional value with which
they say the suretyship agreements conflict. Fairness is a
constitutional value, as far as it goes,
but a party wishing to
impugn a contract as contrary to constitutional values (and therefore
public policy) must formulate the
complaint with more precision than
simply saying that it is unfair. It is notionally possible for a
contractual term to conflict
with one of the foundational values of
the Constitution, such as the rule of law, even though most commonly
the complaint will
be based on a provision of the Bill of Rights. In
fact, there is a reference to the rule of law in the respondents’
papers,
but it is never made clear how the suretyship agreements are
said to offend the rule of law. In all cases, the party raising the
complaint has a duty to explain the cause of action properly and to
motivate it with proper evidence.
45 In this case, for
instance, a major consideration underlying the constitutional cause
of action – although admittedly one
has to do some reading
between the lines to discern this – appears to be the
respondents’ complaint of an inability
to afford to fulfil the
terms of the suretyship without causing themselves financial
hardship. But it is not good enough for a
judge to be left to infer
this from the papers, and less so without a factual substratum from
which to draw legal conclusions.
It is not good enough to make
allegations in the baldest of terms, and then simply ask that the
matter be referred to trial. The
precise details of the
constitutional complaint, and the facts on which it is based, must be
set out so that the court may assess
them properly. That was not done
in this case.
46 The approach followed
by the Constitutional Court in
Barkhuizen
demonstrates the
application of what I have said above.
Barkhuizen
makes clear
that a claim that a contractual term is contrary to the values of the
Constitution and therefore public policy will
always involve the
balancing of constitutional values. This is because:
“
public policy, as
informed by the Constitution, requires in general that parties should
comply with contractual obligations that
have been freely and
voluntarily undertaken. This consideration is expressed in the
maxim
pacta
sunt servanda
,
which, as the Supreme Court of Appeal has repeatedly noted,
gives effect to the central constitutional values of freedom
and
dignity. Self-autonomy, or the ability to regulate one's own affairs,
even to one's own detriment, is the very essence of freedom
and a
vital part of dignity.”
[9]
47 The reference to the
maxim
pacta sunt servanda
is a reference to the principle of
sanctity of contract – ie, that parties must comply with
commitments freely given. The
remarks of Ngcobo J (as he then was)
reproduced above demonstrate the important constitutional value in
compliance with agreements.
This suggests that a party who wishes to
make out a case that a contractual term is contrary to public policy
(for any reason)
must make out the case clearly and precisely. Put
differently – a compelling reason should be given to depart
from the sanctity
of contract.
48 Since no proper
explanation has been given of the constitutional complaint, it
follows that it does not avail the respondents.
# SUMMARY – THE
MERITS
SUMMARY – THE
MERITS
49 As shown above, none
of the three categories of defence raised by the respondents serves
to dislodge Engen’s case. Engen
has established its entitlement
to rely on the suretyship agreements, and its claim must succeed.
#
# THE STRIKE OUT
APPLICATION
THE STRIKE OUT
APPLICATION
50 Before concluding, I
must deal briefly with the strike-out application.
51 Engen did not discuss,
in its founding affidavit, the reasons why its other potential forms
of redress (such as receiving funds
from the liquidation of Anmar and
the different forms of security which it held) were inadequate. In
other words, it did not put
in any energy to establishing that it
invoked the suretyship agreements as a matter of last resort. This is
because, based on the
unqualified language in the suretyship
agreements, it had no obligation to do so. It was the respondents, in
their answering affidavit,
who put this issue into play. This
compelled Engen to address the issue in the reply, and it was there
that the narrative about
the respondents’ supposedly
obstructive conduct was explained. Rather than seeking to address
this in a further affidavit,
the respondents seek to have the
allegations about their obstructive conduct struck out.
52 There is a simple
reason why the strike-out application is misconceived. This is
because the side issue to which it relates –
the issue of
whether the respondents were complicit in Engen’s inability to
recover more from Anmar’s debtors –
is irrelevant to
Engen’s cause of action. The strike-out application therefore
does not relate to anything which is material
to the relief sought by
Engen. That being the case, it cannot be granted because of rule
23(2)(b) of the Uniform Rules. That provision
says that a strike-out
application may only be granted if the applicant (ie, the respondents
in this case) will be prejudiced in
the conduct of its claim or
defence if the application is not granted. By definition, the
respondents cannot be prejudiced if the
strike-out application is not
granted, because whether or not the allegations are struck out will
have no impact on Engen’s
claim or their defence. This makes it
unnecessary to consider whether the allegations are scandalous,
vexatious and/or irrelevant.
53 It follows that the
strike-out application must be dismissed.
# CONCLUSION AND ORDER
CONCLUSION AND ORDER
54 I have referred, in
paragraph 6 above, to the provision in the suretyship agreements
relating to costs. It follows from the way
that the suretyship
agreements deal with that issue that Engen is entitled to costs on
the attorney-client scale.
55 I must highlight one
issue in respect of interest. Both the certificate of balance and the
most recent draft order put up by
Engen (dated 25 January 2022)
record the outstanding balance in respect of claim A as R5 725 367.53
and say nothing about
interest. (Although an earlier draft order does
indeed seek the interest, mirroring the wording of the AOD in this
regard.) This
must be contrasted with the certificate of balance in
respect of claim B, which expressly deals with interest. The notice
of motion,
however, asks for interest at 12% per annum, compounded
monthly, from 1 April 2019 (which is the date from which interest
begins
to run in terms of the AOD) in relation to Claim A.
56 I cannot undertake the
job of trying to work out how much interest was or was not included
in the three payments made to Engen
by Anmar in 2019 (ie, on 30
April, 31 May and 30 June 2019). Since Engen has not assisted me in
that regard, I intend to order
that interest on Claim A is to run
from 1 August 2019. This is because it is common cause that the last
payment by Anmar under
the AOD was due on 31 July 2019. Since it was
not paid on that date, Anmar (and therefore the sureties) were
clearly in mora from
no later than 1 August 2019. I appreciate that
this is not a precise way to deal with the interest because the
initial outstanding
capital amount (ie, as at 1 August 2019) would
have been higher than it is now (taking into account that the roughly
R310 000
received from other sources only came in later), which
would have a knock-on effect on interest. Again, however, Engen ought
to
have explained this issue clearly, and in the absence of a clear
explanation, I have to make an order which deals with this issue
as
fairly as possibly.
57 I therefore make the
following order:
1.
The
strike-out application brought by the first, second and fourth
respondents in respect of paragraphs 7, 8 and 32 of the applicant’s
replying affidavit, is dismissed.
2.
The costs of
the strike-out application are to be costs in the main application.
3.
The first,
second and fourth respondents are to pay to the applicant:
3.1.
In respect
of claim A:
3.1.1.
R5 725 367.53.
3.1.2.
Interest
on the sum of R5 725 367.53 at the rate of 12% per annum,
compounded monthly, to run from 1 August 2019.
3.2.
In respect
of claim B:
3.2.1.
R7 157 396.04.
3.2.2.
Interest
on the sum of R7 157 396.04 at the prime rate of interest
plus 4%, which is to run from 30 September 2019 to
date of payment.
4.
The first,
second and fourth respondents are to pay the costs of this
application, including the strike-out application, on the
attorney-client scale.
ADRIAN FRIEDMAN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected above
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 for hand down is deemed to
be 3 April 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Attorney
for the applicant:
Mathopo
Moshimane Mulangaphuma Inc
Counsel
for the applicant:
S
Aucamp
Attorney
for the first, second and fourth respondents:
JC
Van der Merwe Attorneys
Counsel
for the first, second and fourth respondents:
M
Webbstock (Attorney with right of appearance)
Date
of hearing:
16
March 2023
Date
of judgment:
3
April 2023
[1]
See
Unlawful Occupiers, School Site at paras 12 to 13
[2]
See
Unlawful Occupiers, School Site at para 14
[3]
Also
in paragraph 14 of the judgment
[4]
Lombaard v Droprop CC [2010] 4 All 229 (SCA)
[5]
Lombaard (supra) at para 26
[6]
See Economic Freedom Fights v Manual
2021 (3) SA 425
(SCA) at para
114
[7]
Plascon Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA
623
(A) at 634-5
[8]
Barkhuizen at paras 28 to 29
[9]
Barkhuizen at para 57
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