Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 303South Africa
Nissan Finance, a product of Wesbank, of FirstRand Bank Limited v Gusha Holdings and Enterprises (Pty) Ltd and Another (2022/9914) [2023] ZAGPJHC 303 (5 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 April 2023
Headnotes
judgment application in which the plaintiff seeks the following relief:
Judgment
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## Nissan Finance, a product of Wesbank, of FirstRand Bank Limited v Gusha Holdings and Enterprises (Pty) Ltd and Another (2022/9914) [2023] ZAGPJHC 303 (5 April 2023)
Nissan Finance, a product of Wesbank, of FirstRand Bank Limited v Gusha Holdings and Enterprises (Pty) Ltd and Another (2022/9914) [2023] ZAGPJHC 303 (5 April 2023)
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sino date 5 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
###
CASE
NO:
2022/9914
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
In the matter between:
NISSAN FINANCE, A
PRODUCT OF WESBANK,
OF
FIRSTRAND BANK LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
GUSHA
HOLDINGS AND ENTERPRISES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
MR
TAGARA HOVE
Second
Respondent
J U D G M E N T
MAIER-FRAWLEY J:
1.
This is an opposed summary judgment application in
which the plaintiff seeks the following relief:
1.1.
Cancellation of the agreement;
1.2.
Return of the motor vehicle;
1.3.
Costs of suit;
1.4.
Claim for damages to be postponed
sine
dies.
2.
The plaintiff’s claim apropos the first
defendant is based upon an electronic instalment sale agreement (the
‘agreement’
or ‘credit agreement’) concluded
between the plaintiff (represented by a duly authorised employee) and
the first defendant
(represented by the second defendant) relating to
the first defendant’s purchase of a Nissan motor vehicle.
3.
The
claim apropos the second defendant is based on a written suretyship
agreement in terms of which the plaintiff avers in the particulars
of
claim that the second defendant
‘
bound
himself as
surety
in
solidum
for
and co-principal debtor jointly and severally with the First
Defendant, for the due payment by the First Defendant to the
Plaintiff,
of all monies which the First Defendant may now or from
time to time hereafter owe to the Plaintiff,
from
whatsoever cause and howsoever arising and whether as principal
debtor, guarantor or otherwise and whether trading alone or
in
partnership or under any name, as well as for the due and punctual
performance and discharge of any contract or agreement entered
into
by the First Defendant to the Plaintiff
.’
[1]
I
mention at this juncture that the underlined portions in the above
quote either do not appear in or do not accord with the contents
of
the written suretyship, annexure ‘G’ to the particulars
of claim.
[2]
4.
Consequent upon the first defendant defaulting on
its payment obligations under the agreement and the failure of the
first or second
defendant, despite demand, to bring the arrears up to
date, the plaintiff instituted action to secure the return of the
vehicle
and cancellation of the agreement.
5.
It
should be pointed out that the plaintiff’s particulars of claim
are not a model of clarity or precision. The plaintiff
pleaded in its
particulars of claim that the first defendant (contracting party) was
obliged in terms of the agreement to pay certain
amounts stipulated
in the agreement to the plaintiff on a monthly basis in discharge of
its payment obligations. Regarding the
plaintiff’s right to
cancel the agreement, it pleaded that it was a term of the agreement
that
‘
In
the event of the First Defendant breaching any terms of the Agreement
(all of which are agreed to be material), the Plaintiff
shall be
entitled to immediately obtain possession of the goods and recover
from the First Defendant, as pre-estimated liquidated
damages, the
total amount payable, but not yet paid, less the value of the goods
as at the date of delivery thereof to the Plaintiff
’
[3]
and
that the ‘
first
defendant
has
breached
in
(sic)
terms
of the Agreement in that
they
have
failed to maintain regular instalments on
their
account,
the arrears being the sum of R36,14 l.79 and the full outstanding
balance on the account amounts to R223,874.36
.’
(emphasis added).
The
plaintiff further
inter
alia
pleaded
that it complied with all its obligations in terms of the NCA,
including sections 129 and 130 of the NCA. Notices in terms
of s
129(1)(a) of the National Credit Act 34 of 1975 (the NCA) were sent
by registered mail to the defendants respectively.
Both
defendants failed to respond to the s129 notices.
Consequently,
so the plaintiff pleaded,
‘
S
hould
the Defendan
t
[singular]
fail
to pay the arrears plus the costs, the plaintiff will request the
Honourable court to cancel the Agreement by way of judgment.’
(emphasis
added)
6.
The plaintiff’s manner
of pleading obfuscates the surety’s liability under the
suretyship agreement (i.e., liability
to pay any amounts due and
owing by the first respondent on the
first
respondent’s account
under the credit
agreement consequent upon the first respondent’s default) with
the first respondent’s liability under
the credit agreement to
effect payment of the monthly amounts on its account on due date. It
is clear from a reading of the credit
agreement attached to the
particulars of claim that the second defendant was not personally a
contracting party to the credit agreement.
His liability for payment
of all sums due by the first defendant under the credit agreement,
limited to an amount of R177 082.50,
arose from the suretyship
agreement as opposed to the credit agreement. Despite this, as
alleged in the particulars of claim, the
plaintiff delivered a notice
in terms of s129 of the NCA to the second defendant. In this notice,
attached as annexure ‘F1’
to the particulars of claim,
the plaintiff’s attorneys recorded, amongst others, the
following:
“
2.
In terms of a deed of suretyship which you signed on the 18 September
2019 you bound yourself as a surety and co-principal debtor
with
GUSHA HOLDINGS AND ENTERPRISES (PTY) LTD together with the
co-principals for all obligations due to our client
in
respect of the abovementioned agreement
.
[4]
3.
According to our client's records GUSHA HOLDINGS AND ENTERPRISES
(PTY) LTD is in arrears with R31,552.53. The next instalment
of
R4,214.28 is payable on 7 March 2022. The total balance outstanding
under the agreement, including arrears, amounts to R223,279.41.
4.
You
have
failed to meet
your
obligations
in
terms of
the
above agreement
[5]
and
accordingly
your
account is in arrears
for
more than 20 (Twenty) business days in the amount set out above.
5.
Please note that our client is desirous to implement a repayment plan
with you in order to settle the outstanding arrears and
balance in
respect of the abovementioned agreement in order to avoid the
incurrence of any further unnecessary costs.
7.
Should we not receive a response to this notice within 10 (ten)
business days from date of this letter,
then
our client will exercise its right to
-
[6]
7.1
Terminate the credit facility / credit agreement
;
7.2
Close the credit facility / credit agreement;
7.3
Approach the Court to enforce the agreement.
[7]
7.
As per
your
credit agreement
, you will be
liable for any legal costs that our client incurs pursuing its
outstanding balance because of
your failure to settle your
arrears
, which legal costs can be taxed on request...”
(emphasis added)
7.
The
defendants relied on various technical defences in opposing the grant
of summary judgment. Only those ultimately pursued at
the hearing of
the matter need be mentioned. These include:
7.1.
that
the affidavit filed by the plaintiff does not comply with the
provisions of rule 32(2)(b) in that the deponent has failed to
verify
the cause of action or to identify the point of law relied on;
7.2.
that
the plaintiff failed to provide a certificate that evinces that it is
registered as a credit provider in terms of s 40 of the
NCA;
7.3.
that
the plaintiff applied for summary judgment at a time when a binding
settlement or payment arrangement was in force and being
complied
with by the defendants and pursued its application notwithstanding
first defendant’s payment of the arrears;
7.4.
that
the plaintiff has failed to comply with the provisions of s 129 of
the NCA; and
7.5.
that
the deponent to the affidavit filed in support of the application for
summary judgment was not authorised to depose to the
affidavit.
8.
As
regards the merits of the plaintiff’s claim, the plea filed by
the defendant is, save in the respects identified below,
tantamount
to a bare denial of the averments made in the particulars of claim.
The defendants plead that they ‘do not admit’
the
citation of the plaintiff, which includes the allegation in paragraph
1.2 of the particulars of claim, namely, that the plaintiff
is a
registered credit provider. As regards the conclusion of the credit
agreement, the defendants do not deny that the first defendant
represented by the second defendant concluded the credit agreement in
question. They deny only that the plaintiff was represented
by a duly
authorised employee in concluding the agreement. They also do not
deny that the vehicle was delivered to the first defendant,
only that
it was the
plaintiff
(bank)
that delivered it to the first defendant. The defendants aver that
the first defendant purchased the vehicle from a motor
dealer, and
not the plaintiff, hence they plead that ‘
the
plaintiff is required to prove the terms of the agreement it alleges
in regard to what the plaintiff states in paragraph 6’
of the
particulars of claim.
[8]
In
paragraph 6 of the Particulars of claim, the plaintiff avers that the
first defendant purchased the vehicle from the plaintiff
in terms of
the credit agreement. What remains denied in the plea is,
inter
alia
:
(i) that the second defendant bound himself as surety and
co-principal debtor, and hence he denies the pleaded terms of the
alleged
suretyship; (ii) that either defendant received the s 129
notices; (iii) that annexure ‘B’ (copy of the credit
agreement)
was attached to the particulars of claim; (iv) that the
first defendant breached the terms of the credit agreement; and (v)
that
the plaintiff complied with the provisions of s 129 of the NCA.
9.
In the
opposing affidavit deposed to by the manager of the first defendant
(Mr Zita Ibizo Bgwaramba) on behalf of the first defendant,
the first
defendant raised only certain points
in
limine
[9]
without
disclosing the nature and grounds of its defence to the plaintiff’s
claim or the material facts relied on therefor.
[10]
Furthermore, Mr Bgwaramba did not say anything about whether or not
he could swear positively the fact that the first defendant
has a
bona
fide
defence
to the action. In a separate affidavit headed ‘confirmatory
affidavit’, the second defendant, Mr Hove, did no
more than
state that ‘
I
have read the affidavit deposed to by Zita Ibizo Bgwarambo and oppose
the application for summary judgment on the same grounds.’
10.
Nowhere in the defendants’ opposing affidavits has either of
the defendants specifically stated that the first defendant
was not
in arrears with its monthly instalments. On the contrary, in its
opposing affidavit, the deponent states that a first payment
was made
on behalf of the first defendant for purposes of liquidating the
arrears by way of monthly instalments, by agreement between
the
parties. In a later supplementary opposing affidavit deposed to by Mr
Bgwaramba
on behalf of the first defendant, he stated that he made certain
payments to the plaintiff in respect of the arrears that remained
outstanding. These payments occurred after service of the summons.
This would seem to be a clear acknowledgment that the first
defendant, contrary to what is averred by it in its plea, was indeed
in arrears with its payment obligations in the amount averred
in the
particulars of claim at the time the summons was served. Of further
significance, is the fact that the first defendant has
not, in the
opposing affidavit, alleged payment by it of any of the instalments
under the credit agreement on due date, which were
said by the
plaintiff to have not been paid. Generally speaking, one would have
expected such a statement to have been made in
order to establish a
bona fide
defence for the purposes of resisting summary judgment. As regards
the allegation in the plea that the defendants did not receive
the
s129 notices, neither of the defendants advanced any reason in their
opposing affidavits as to why they could not collect the
notices from
the relevant post office after notification to them by the post
office of a registered item awaiting collection, as
pleaded and
demonstrated by the plaintiff in the summons.
11.
The
question to be answered at the summary judgment stage is not whether
a pleaded defence stands good prospects of success. It
is whether the
defence is genuinely advanced.
[11]
12.
In
Mpfuni
[12]
I
pointed out that in terms of the recently amended Rule 32(2)(b),
[13]
a plaintiff is required to ‘verify the cause of action, and
identify any point of law relied upon and the facts upon which
the
plaintiff’s claim is based, and explain briefly why the defence
as pleaded does not raise any issue for trial’.
Thus, in order
to comply with sub-rule 2(b), the affidavit filed in support of the
application must contain:
[14]
(1)
A verification of the cause of action and
the amount, if any, claimed;
(2)
An identification of any point of law
relied upon;
(3)
An identification of the facts upon which
the plaintiff’s claim is based; and
(4)
A brief explanation as to why the defence
as pleaded does not raise any issue for trial.
13.
In
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
(‘
Tumileng’)
,
[15]
the court held as follows:
“
[13]
Rule 32(3), which regulates what is required from a defendant in its
opposing affidavit, has been left substantively unamended
in the
overhauled procedure. That means that
the
test remains what it always was: has the defendant disclosed a bona
fide (i.e. an apparently genuinely advanced, as distinct
from sham)
defence
?
There is no indication in the amended rule that the method of
determining that has changed.
The
classical formulations in Maharaj and Breitenbach v Fiat SA as to
what is expected of a defendant seeking to successfully oppose
an
application for summary judgment therefore remain of application
.
A defendant is not required to show that its defence is likely to
prevail. If a defendant can show that it has a legally cognisable
defence on the face of it, and that the defence is genuine or bona
fide, summary judgment must be refused. The defendant’s
prospects of success are irrelevant.
[15]... Under the new
rule, a plaintiff would be justified in bringing an application for
summary judgment only if it were able
to show that the pleaded
defence is not bona fide; in other words, by showing that the plea is
a sham plea.” (footnotes omitted)
(emphasis added)
14.
Uniform rule 32(3)(b) sets out what is
required by a defendant resisting summary judgment. In Tumileng
supra,
Binns-Ward
J undertook a detailed analysis of the implications of the amendments
to the rule, and at paragraphs 24 and 25 of the
judgment, had the
following to say about this requirement:
“
[24]...
As has always been the position, the opposing affidavit must
‘disclose fully the nature and grounds of the defence
and the
material facts relied upon therefor’. The purpose of the
opposing affidavit also remains, as historically the case,
to
demonstrate that the defendant ‘has a bona fide defence to the
action’....
[25] The assessment of
whether a defence is bona fide is made with regard to the manner in
which it has been substantiated in the
opposing affidavit; viz. upon
a consideration of the extent to which ‘the nature and grounds
of the defence and the material
facts relied upon therefor’
have been canvassed by the deponent. That was the method by which the
court traditionally tested,
insofar as it was possible on paper,
whether the defence described by the defendant was ‘contrived’,
in other words
not bona fide. And the amended subrule 32(3)(b)
implies that it should continue to be the indicated method.”
15.
The
defendants’ opposing affidavits dealt only with a limited
number of technical issues, and by no means addressed the issues
referred to by the plaintiff when it dealt with the defences raised
in the defendant’s plea. They failed to satisfy the
requirements of rule 32(3)(b) and dismally failed to back up their
bald plea with substantiating particularity.
The
defendants’ opposing affidavits, seen in isolation and absent
the technical defences raised therein, do not identify nor
do they
substantiate a
triable
defence
‘
on
the face of it’ in the sense conveyed by Binns-Ward J in the
Tumileng
case
.
Put
differently, having regard to the obvious deficiencies in the
opposing affidavits identified in the preceding paragraphs, I
have
grave difficulty in finding that the ostensible defences to be
deduced from the plea arising from the various denials, including
a
denial of any liability to the plaintiff, have been shown to have
been genuinely advanced in these proceedings.
[16]
16.
I turn now to deal with a point
in
limine
on which the defendants rely.
Plaintiff’s
failure to verify the cause of action
17.
This
requirement, which was a requirement in subrule (2) of Rule 32 in its
original form, has been retained in subrule (2)(b) of
Rule 32 in its
amended form. In
Mphahlele
supra
, at
paragraph 17, the court summarised the position thus:
“
...
what
must be verified are the facts as alleged in the summons. Further,
the deponent to the affidavit in support of the application
for
summary judgment must verify what has been referred to as a complete
or perfected cause of action. From the aforegoing, it
is clear that
this requirement of the subrule does not provide for a verification
of evidence or the supplementing of a cause of
action with evidence.
It is confined solely to those facts which are already present and as
pleaded in the plaintiff’s summons
(it being trite that a
plaintiff in summary judgment proceedings is prohibited from taking a
further procedural step in the proceedings
by, for example, amending
the particulars of claim and then seeking to claim summary
judgment).”
18.
Rule 32(2)(a) requires that the supporting
affidavit be made by the plaintiff or by any other person who can
swear positively to
the facts. The defendants do not take issue with
the fact that the deponent to the supporting affidavit has set out
the circumstances
that support a conclusion that she is able to swear
positively to the facts alleged in the summons.
19.
Rule
32(2)(b) sets out what the affidavit must contain. The deponent to
the answering affidavit is amongst others, required to verify
the
cause of action and the amount, if any, claimed
[17]
in the supporting affidavit. Our courts have consistently held that
if
ex
facie
the
supporting affidavit the requisite verification has not occurred, the
court would have no jurisdiction to grant summary judgment.
[18]
It is also trite that all the facts supporting the cause of action
must be verified.
[19]
20.
The defendants submit that the supporting
affidavit is devoid of any verification of the cause of action. The
plaintiff on the other
hand submits that paragraphs 5 and 7 of the
supporting affidavit, in effect, ‘
confirm
and/or verify the cause of action as stated in the particulars of
claim’,
when regard is had to the
underlined portions in the quoted passage below. I disagree for
reasons that follow. In paragraphs 5 and
7 of the supporting
affidavit, the following is said:
“
5.
In the ordinary course of my duties as Recoveries Officer and having
regard to the Plaintiff's records, accounts and other relevant
documents in my possession and under my control, I have acquired
personal knowledge of the First Defendant's financial standing
with
the Plaintiff
and
I can swear positively to the facts alleged and the amounts claimed
in the Plaintiff's particulars of claim.
7.
I have read the defendants plea and I verily believe and in my
opinion, the defendants have no bona fide defence
to the
plaintiff's claim as set out in the particulars of claim
and that
notice of intention to defend and the plea have been delivered solely
for the purpose of delay.” (emphasis added)
21.
Whilst certain amounts comprising the arrears and
outstanding balance on the first defendant’s account are
alleged in the
particulars of claim, as I have already pointed out,
no monetary amount as such is claimed in the particulars of claim.
The claim
on which summary judgment is sought is for cancellation of
the agreement and return of the vehicle on account of a material
breach
of the agreement by the first defendant, which despite demand,
was not remedied by it within the period stated in the demand, this,
despite forewarning in the demand that the plaintiff would, in such
event, exercise its right to terminate the agreement. This
notwithstanding, the deponent to the supporting affidavit purported
to swear positively not only to the facts alleged but to ‘the
amounts claimed’ in the particulars of claim.
22.
It is
trite that a person who deposes to an affidavit in support of summary
judgment must set out the circumstances from which the
Court would be
justified in coming to the conclusion that the facts are within his
or her knowledge, or it must appear from the
nature of his or her
evidence that the facts are within his or her knowledge in order for
a court to be satisfied that the deponent
is a person who fulfils the
requirement that he or she is one who can swear positively to the
facts.
[20]
This is what
the deponent did in paragraphs 4 and 5 of the supporting affidavit,
and no more. If the ability to swear positively
to the facts in the
summons is to be regarded as tantamount to the actual verification of
the facts, there would have been no need
to differentiate between the
separate requirements in sub-rules (a) and (b) of rule 32(2).
A
deponent’s knowledge of the facts enabling him or her to swear
positively thereto is what qualifies or entitles the deponent
to make
the affidavit. It does not serve to fulfil the separate requirement
of verification of the facts supporting the cause of
action in the
summons.
23.
The fact that the deponent states in paragraph 7
that she is of the opinion that
the
defendants have no
bona
fide
defence
to the plaintiff's claim as set out in the particulars of claim,
likewise does not assist the plaintiff. It does not amount
to a
verification of the cause of action. In paragraph 7, the deponent
does no more than provide the justification for being able
to engage
with the content of the plea.
24.
In Maharaj v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(AD) at422E-H. Corbett JA, writing
for a unanimous court, explained as follows:
“
Moreover,
the word 'verifying' cannot be taken to qualify the word 'facts' and
to be part of the definition of the 'any other person'
who may make
the affidavit,… since this would run counter to the meaning of
the word 'verifying' and the grammatical construction
of the sentence
in which these words occur. The relevant meanings of 'verify' in the
Short Oxford English Dictionary are: 'to testify
or
affirm
formally
or
upon oath;... to testify to
,
to assert as true or certain
'.
Clearly facts do not verify; a person verifies an alleged state of
facts. And where the verification takes the form of a sworn
affidavit
it may be said, figuratively, that the affidavit verifies the
facts...” (emphasis added)
The learned judge
concluded that the words 'verifying the cause of action and the
amount, if any, claimed’ refer to the content
of the affidavit
– what must be set out in the affidavit - as opposed to the
requirement relating to who may make the affidavit.
Although
Maharaj
was decided before the advent of the 2019 amendment in the rule,
as I have already indicated, the requirement in relation to
verification
was retained in the amended rule and thus judicial
interpretation in relation to the requirement of verification in the
pre-amended
rule still holds good.
25.
Courts
determining summary judgment applications have, both prior to the
recent amendments to rule 32 and subsequent thereto, consistently
endorsed the approach that an applicant in summary judgment
proceedings must comply strictly with the requirements of the Rules
of Court.
[21]
For example, in
Fischereigesellschaft,
[22]
the
court put it thus:
“
As
was pointed out in
Misid
Investments (Pty.) Ltd v Leslie
1960
(4) SA 473
(W), at p. 474, the applicant in summary judgment
proceedings must
comply
strictly with the requirements of the Rules of Court.
In his
judgment in this case MUNNIK, A.J. (as he then was), indicated that
to his mind the approach of the Court when objections
were raised on
technical grounds to an application for summary judgment had been
correctly set out by MARAIS, J.,
in
Mowschenson and Mowschenson v Mercantile Acceptance Corporation of SA
Ltd.
,
1959 (3) SA 362
(W) at p. 366, where he stated: 'The proper approach
appears to me to be the one which keeps the important fact in view
that the
remedy for summary judgment is an extraordinary remedy, and
a very stringent one, in that it permits a judgment to be given
without
trial.' I am in respectful agreement.”
[23]
(emphasis added)
26.
As
stated in
Pillay,
[24]
summary
judgment cannot be granted in respect of a cause of action not so
verified. The absence of a
bona
fide
defence
does not cure the defects in the summary judgment application read
with the summons.
[25]
27.
For the reasons given, the point
in
limine
holds good and plaintiff is not
entitled to summary judgment. As the point raised is dispositive of
the application, it is not necessary
for me to determine the
remaining points relied on by the defendants.
28.
One further issue that arose subsequent to the
hearing of the application requires mention. During the course of
oral argument tendered
at the hearing of the application, both
counsel who appeared for the parties raised the fact that the arrears
alleged in paragraph
11 of the particulars of claim to be owing by
the first defendant in the amount of R36 141,79, had since been
paid on behalf
of the first defendant. After judgment was reserved in
the matter but before judgment was delivered, the first defendant
filed
a supplementary affidavit (albeit without leave of court first
having been obtained) in which the deponent thereto,
inter
alia,
stated that he had paid the
amount of R36 141,79 to the plaintiff on 10 February 2023. This
payment was presumably made in
an attempt to avoid the grant of
summary judgment on the basis of the plaintiff’s own pleading,
where it will be recalled
that the plaintiff averred (in paragraph 28
of the particulars of claim) that ‘
Should
the defendant fail to pay the arrears plus costs, the Plaintiff will
request the above Honourable Court to cancel the agreement
by way of
judgment.’
The fact
of the payment, which occurred after service of summons, and after
the institution of the summary judgment, and after the
opposing
affidavits were filed, shone a light on the question of whether or
not a defendant can file a supplementary opposing affidavit
in
summary judgment proceedings.
29.
Rule
32(4) expressly precludes the applicant in summary judgment
proceedings from adducing any evidence otherwise than by the
affidavit
referred to in subrule 2. No annexures to a plaintiff’s
verifying affidavit are allowed except if the claim is founded on
a
liquid document, in which instance a copy of the document must be
annexed to the affidavit, although the inclusion of evidence
in the
affidavit, or the annexing of documentary evidence, will not
invalidate the application, but will simply be ignored by the
court.
[26]
In dealing with the
provisions of
Sections 129(1)
and
130
of the
National Credit Act, No.
34 of 2005
in the context of a summary judgment application, the
Supreme Court of Appeal has held that
Rule 32(4)
limits a plaintiff’s
evidence in summary judgment proceedings to the affidavit supporting
the notice of application and that
reliance on a document not annexed
to the summons but handed up at the hearing without complaint, was
simply inadmissible.
[27]
30.
The rule is however silent on what a defendant who
opposes the application for summary judgment may or may not do
regarding adducing
further evidence. In the present matter, the first
defendant simply filed a supplementary affidavit after the hearing.
In this
affidavit, it provided documentary proof of its payment on 10
February 2023 (i.e., three days prior to the hearing of the matter).
The affidavit did no more than provide evidence under oath in support
of information that had already been placed on record from
the bar by
counsel representing the parties. As earlier indicated, during the
course of their oral submissions, both parties’
counsel alluded
to the fact that the payment had been effected and both made
submissions in regard thereto. The supplementary affidavit
served to
evidence what was essentially a common cause fact, which was
certainly not prejudicial to the applicant.
31.
As I
see it, I have a discretion to permit the supplementary
affidavit.
[28]
This court in
any event has inherent power to regulate procedure in terms of
Section 173 of the Constitution, which may include
the power to grant
procedural relief where the rules of court make no provision for it.
This was recognised in the pre-constitutional
dispensation, as stated
by Gardiner JP
in
Cohen & Tyfield v Hull Chemical Works
1929
CPD 9
at 11: ‘(j)ust as the Court has the power to make a Rule,
so it has an inherent power, when just cause is shown, to do
something
which is not provided for by the Rule’. Within the
constitutional dispensation, the power extends to overlooking
procedural
irregularities or eschewing formalism in the application
of the rules to allow a court to take account of relevant evidence in
the interests of justice, particularly in the absence of prejudice
being occasioned to the opposite party.
[29]
In my view, the evidence tendered in the supplementary affidavit is
relevant to the extent set out in paragraph 10 above and is
received
for that purpose.
32.
The defendants succeeded in warding off summary
judgment on a technical basis in circumstances where any triable
defences were not
shown to be
bona fide
.
The costs order below accounts for such circumstances.
33.
In the circumstances, the following order is
granted:
ORDER:
33.1.
Summary judgment is refused.
33.2.
The defendants are granted leave to defend the
action.
33.3.
The costs of this application shall be costs in
the trial.
AVRILLE MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 13
February 2023
Judgment delivered 5
April 2023
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be have been at
10h00 on 5 April 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Plaintiff:
Adv A. Salani
Instructed
by:
Rossouws Leslie Inc
Counsel
for Defendants:
Adv L. Mokwena
Instructed
by:
Thomson
Wilks Inc
[1]
Par
25 of the particulars of claim.
[2]
Relevant
clauses in the suretyship, are the following;
“
1...
I/We, the undersigned, hereby declare that I/We bind
myself/ourselves jointly and severally, as surety and as
co-principal
debtor for the punctual payment of all sums due or to
become due to FirstRand Bank Limited (the Bank) by GUSHA HOLDINGS
AND ENTERPRISES
in
terms of or arising out of or incidental to the Agreement
stated
above up to a value of the R177,082.50.
5...The
Bank is under no obligation to enforce or pursue any of its rights
against the Debtor before enforcing them against the
surety/ies and
co-principal debtor/s.
6.
The suretyship is ...
continuing security for the whole amount
now or in future owing to the Bank
.
17.
The surety/ies or co-principal debtor/s shall be liable for all
legal costs, on an attorney own client scale
21.
The surety renounces the benefits of excu[s]sion, division and
cession of action, revision of accounts and no value received.”
(emphasis added)
As
can be seen, the liability of the surety was restricted to the
principal debtor’s indebtedness arising from or incidental
to
the credit agreement, limited to an amount of
R177,082.50,
and
did not expressly include expansive liability for any
indebtedness
of
any nature from whatsoever cause
in
respect of monies due and owing by the principal debtor under the
credit agreement. Nor did the surety expressly guarantee
the
‘
due
and punctual performance and discharge of
any
contract or
agreement entered into by the First Defendant to the Plaintiff.’
[3]
This
appears to be based on the breach clause (clause 13) contained in
the terms and conditions of the agreement and annexed to
the
particulars of claim, which provides, in relevant part, as follows:
13.
Breach
13.1 If:
13.1.1 you do not comply
with any of the terms and conditions of the Agreement (all of which
you agree are material) or
13.1.2 you fail to pay
any amounts due in terms of this Agreement; or
…
...
13.2 Upon the occurrence
of any of the abovementioned events, we shall be entitled, at our
election and without prejudice, to:
13.2.1 claim immediate
payment of the outstanding balance together with interest and all
amounts owing or claimable by us, irrespective
of whether or not
such amounts are due at such stage;
or
13.2.2 take possession
of the Goods in terms of an attachment order, retain all payments
already made in terms hereof by yourself
and to claim as liquidated
damages, payment of the difference between the balance outstanding
and the market value of the Goods
determined in accordance with
clause 11.5.2.3, which amount shall be immediately due and payable.”
(own emphasis)
[4]
I
point out that the reference to the ‘
abovementioned
agreement’ in paragraph 2 of the notice was clearly a
reference to the credit agreement concluded between
the plaintiff
and the first defendant.
[5]
As
the surety personally did not operate any account in terms of the
suretyship and as the preamble to the notice unequivocally
referred
only to the first defendant’s default under the described
credit agreement, the reference in paragraph 4 to ‘the
above
agreement’ was clearly a reference to the credit agreement
itself.
[6]
Clause
13.3 of the Agreement provides for the delivery of a notice as
envisaged in s 129 of the NCA following upon a breach by
the first
defendant of the terms of the agreement in two distinct
circumstances: the first being in the event that the plaintiff
elects to enforce the agreement (clause 13.3) and the second being
in the event that the plaintiff elects to terminate the agreement
in
terms of s123 of the NCA (clause 13.5). In either event, the
following procedure was to apply:
“
13.3.
If
we elect to enforce the Agreement, a notice will be sent to you,
which will set out
:
13.3.1 the details of
your default;
13.3.2 the period in
which we require you to rectify the default;
13.3.3 your rights to
refer this Agreement to a debt counsellor, alternative dispute
resolution agent, Consumer Court or ombudsman
with jurisdiction,
with the intention of resolving any disputes or developing and
agreeing on a plan to bring your payments under
this Agreement up to
date.
13.4 Any legal
proceedings will not be commenced against you unless:
13.4.1 You have been in
default for at least 20 (twenty) business days;
13.4.2 At least 10 (ten)
business days have elapsed since the default letter or notice
referred to above has been delivered...
13.4.3 You have failed
to respond to the default letter or you have responded by rejecting
our proposal;
13.4.4 You have not
surrendered the Goods to us in terms of Section 127 of the Act;
13.5
Should we elect
to terminate this Agreement in terms of Section 123 of the Act, the
same procedure set out in 13.3 above, will
be followed prior
thereto
.
13.6
Before
termination of the Agreement you are entitled to reinstate the
Agreement in respect of which you are in default, by paying
all
overdue amounts, as well as out permitted default charges and
reasonable costs up to the time of reinstatement
.”
Section 123 of the NCA
provides, in relevant part, as follows:
“
123
.
Termination of agreement by credit provider
.—(1)
A credit provider may terminate a credit agreement before the time
provided in that agreement only in accordance with
this section.
(2) If a consumer is in
default under a credit agreement, the credit provider may take the
steps set out in Part C of Chapter
6 to enforce and terminate that
agreement.”
Part C of Chapter 6
includes, amongst others, sections 129 and 130 of the NCA, which
provide for procedures that are required
to be followed for debt
enforcement and prior to the institution of legal action.
Of relevance to the
present matter, are sub-sections 3 and 4 of s129 of the NCA, which
provide, in relevant part, as follows:
“
(3)
Subject to subsection (4), a consumer may at any time before the
credit provider has cancelled the agreement, remedy a default
in
such credit agreement by paying to the credit provider all amounts
that are overdue, together with the credit provider’s
prescribed default administration charges and reasonable costs of
enforcing the agreement up to the time the default was remedied.
(4) A credit provider
may not re-instate or revive a credit agreement after—
(a)...
(b)...
(c) the termination
thereof in accordance with section 123.”
[7]
This
is presumably a reference to s 130(2) of the NCA
[8]
Despite
this, in the affidavit filed in support of the summary judgment
application, the deponent, ostensibly in misreading the
plea, states
that ‘
The
First and Second defendant deny entering into an agreement with the
plaintiff, accepting delivery of the vehicle and being
bound to the
terms and conditions thereof.’
[9]
Being
those points referred to in paras 8.3 to 8.5 above in the judgment,
including the point that the credit agreement appears
not to have
been cancelled by the plaintiff and remains extant.
[10]
In
terms of rule 32(3)(b),
the
defendant may satisfy the court by affidavit
or
with the leave of the court by oral evidence
of
such defendant or of any other person who can swear positively to
the fact that the defendant has a bona fide defence to the
action
;
such
affidavit or evidence shall disclose fully the nature and grounds of
the defence and the material facts relied upon therefor
.”
(emphasis added)
In terms of rule 32(5),
if the defendant does not satisfy the court as provided in paragraph
(b) of subrule (3), the court may
enter summary judgment for the
plaintiff.
[11]
See:
Guardrisk v Life Limited FML Life (Pty) Ltd and Another
(9859/2020)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 137 (15 February 2023) at para 12, where the court
endorsed and applied what was earlier stated in
T
umileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC)
at paragraph 23.
The
court in
Bravura
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v A1 Capital (Pty) Ltd
(12632/2020)
[2021] ZAGPJHC 121 (13 May 2021) at paras 36-37,
in
echoing the decision of
Tumileng,
said
that what the court is to consider is whether the defence raised by
the respondent in its plea and affidavit resisting summary
judgement, is a genuine defence or one that genuinely raises any
triable issue or whether it is contrived, with the intention
to
delay the inevitable and undisputed debt. This presupposes a
balancing act against the contentions by the applicant, weighed
against those by the respondent.
[12]
Mpfuni
v Segwapa Inc
2022
JDR 0673 (GJ) at par
[13]
The
amendements came into operation on 1 July 2019.
[14]
See:
Erasmus, ‘Superior Court Practice’ (2
nd
edition)
at D1-401
[15]
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC) at paras 13 & 15.
[16]
The
remarks of Binns-Ward J in
Tumileng
at par 45,(
cited
in fn 14 above) with whose reasoning I agree,are entirely apposite
in the context of this matter. There, the following was
said:
“
To
borrow from Navsa JA’s characterisation of the defendant’s
position in Joob Joob Investments, ‘such defences
as were
proffered [were] cast in the most dubious terms’.
The
most probable inference in the circumstances is that no
particularity has been furnished because the defences and supposed
counterclaim are not genuinely advanced. This is especially so
because the defendant not only failed, quite dismally, to satisfy
the requirements of rule 32(3)(b), it also failed to
respond
to the challenge to it in the plaintiff’s supporting affidavit
to
back
up its bald plea with substantiating particularity. If a defendant
fails to put up the facts that it obviously should have
been able to
do were it advancing a genuine defence, it cannot complain if the
court is left in a position in which it is unable
to find a
reasonable basis to doubt that it does not have a bona fide defence.
There
is, moreover, nothing in the papers to justify the court exercising
its overriding discretion in favour of the defendant
.”
(emphasis
added)
[17]
It
should be noted that in the present matter, no amount was claimed,
rather, the plaintiff’s (unliquidated) claim for damages,
the
calculation of which is only determinable at a future date, is
sought to be postponed sine dies in the particulars of claim.
As
such damages claim falls outside the ambit of rule 32(1), such claim
was likewise sought to be postponed in the summary judgment
application..
[18]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Coventry
1998
(4) SA 351
(N) at 353D-E;
Mowschenson
and Mowchenson v Mercantile Acceptance Corporation of SA Ltd
1959
(3) SA 362
(W) at 366C-D;
Shackleton
Credit Management (Pty) Ltd v Microzone Trading 88 CC
2010
(5) SA 112
KZP at 122F-I
[19]
All
Purpose Space Heating Co of SA (Pty) Ltd v Schweltzer
1970
(3) SA 560
(D) at 563
;
Northern Cape Scrap & Metals Edms Bpk v Upington Radiators and
Motor Graveyard (Edms) Bpk
1974
(3) SA 788
(NC);
Dowson
& Dobson Industrial Ltd v Van der Werf
1981
(4) SA 417
(C) at 426-8.
[20]
See
Raphael
& Co v Standard Produce Co. (Pty.) Ltd
1951
(4) SA 244 (C)
[21]
Decisions
post amendment include
Mphahlele
supra;
Tumileng
supra;
and
Mpfuni
supra.
[22]
Fischereigesellschaft
F Busse & Co Kommanditgesellschaft v African Frozen Products
(Pty)
Ltd
1967 (4) SA 105
(C) at 111A-B.
[23]
Mowschenson
and Mowschenson v Mercantile Acceptance Corporation of SA Ltd
1959
(3) SA 362
(W) is authority for saying that if ex facie the founding
affidavit the requisite verification of the cause of action has not
occurred, the court would not have jurisdiction to grant summary
judgment.
[24]
Pillay
v Andermain (Pty) Ltd
1970 (1) SA 531
(TPD) at 536C-E. See too:
Buttertum
Property Letting (Pty) Ltd v Dihlabeng Local Municipality
2016
JDR 2035 (FB) (“
Buttertum”)
,a
Full Bench decision by Moloi and Daffue JJ of the Free State
Division, Bloemfontein, para 46, (albeit decided in the context
of
the same requirement appearing in Rule 14 of the Magistrates’
court rules) where the following was said: “…
the
absence of a defence did not cure the defects in the summary
judgment application
read
with the summons…Wallis, J (as he then was) mentioned in
Schackleton Credit Management supra
[24]
that
the
starting point in adjudication of a summary judgment application is
the application and if that is defective, then cadit quaestio
.”
(emphasis added)
[25]
Ibid
Buttertum
,
at par 46.
[26]
Wright
v McGuinness
1956
(3) SA 184
(C);
Kosak
& Co. (Pty) Ltd v Keller
1962
(1) SA 441
(W);
Triple
Jay Equipment (SWA) (Pty) Ltd v Muller
1962
(3) SA 115
(SWA);
South
African Trade Union Assurance Society Ltd v Dermot Properties (Pty)
Ltd
1962
(3) SA 601
(W);
Trust
Bank of Africa Ltd v Hansa (supra); Venter v Kruger
1971
(3) SA 848
(N) at 851;
AE
Motors (Pty) Ltd v Levitt
1972
(3) SA 658
(T). Whilst these cases were decided before extensive
amendments were made to Rule 32, in
Absa
Bank Limited v Mphahlele N.O and Others
(45323/2019,
42121/2019) [2020] ZAGPPHC 257 (26 March 2020), par 14,
(‘
Mphahlele
’
),
a case decided after the amended rule came into operation, the court
reached the same conclusion.
[27]
Rossouw
and Another v First Rand Bank Ltd
2010
(6) SA 439
(SCA) at paras [35] and [46]
[28]
See
Anglo
Operations Ltd v Sandhurst Estates (Pty) Ltd
2007
(2) SA 363
(SCA) at para [32]
[29]
An
approach that eschews formalism where the interests of justice so
dictate has been endorsed by the Constitutional Court in
Mukaddam
v Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd and Others
2013
(5) SA 89
(CC) at par 39, where the following was said:
“
Flexibility
in applying requirements of procedure is common in our courts. Even
where enacted rules of courts are involved, our
courts reserve for
themselves the power to condone non-compliance if the interests of
justice require them to do so. Rigidity
has no place in the
operation of court procedures. Recently in
PFE
International and Others v Industrial Department Corporation of
South Africa Ltd
,
this Court reaffirmed the principle that rules of procedure must be
applied flexibly. There this Court said:
‘
Since
the rules are made for courts to facilitate the adjudication of
cases, the superior courts enjoy the power to regulate their
processes, taking into account the interests of justice. It is this
power that makes every superior court the master of its own
process.
It enables a superior court to lay down a process to be followed in
particular cases, even if that process deviates
from what its rules
prescribe. Consistent with that power, this Court may in the
interests of justice depart from its own rules.’
”
See
too:
Eke v Parsons
2016
(3) SA 37
(CC) at par 39, where the following was said:
“…
Without
doubt, rules governing the court process cannot be disregarded. They
serve an undeniably important purpose. That, however,
does not mean
that courts should be detained by the rules to a point where they
are hamstrung in the performance of the core
function of dispensing
justice. Put differently, rules should not be observed for their own
sake. Where the interests of justice
so dictate, courts may depart
from a strict observance of the rules. That, even where one of the
litigants is insistent that
there be adherence to the rules. Not
surprisingly, courts have often said “[i]t is trite that the
rules exist for the courts,
and not the courts for the rules”.
(footnotes omitted).
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