Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 519South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Makaula and Another (2022/1538) [2023] ZAGPJHC 519 (19 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 May 2023
Headnotes
judgment the same point was taken and rejected as follows at paragraph 16:
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 519
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Makaula and Another (2022/1538) [2023] ZAGPJHC 519 (19 May 2023)
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Makaula and Another (2022/1538) [2023] ZAGPJHC 519 (19 May 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_519.html
sino date 19 May 2023
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION – Commissioner of oaths – Interest in
matter – Bank panel attorneys – default
judgment
applications – Commissioning affidavits of clients but not
in matters where representing them – Case
law and nature of
interest discussed – Attorney does not have pecuniary
interest or an interest in a proprietary right
or an interest by
which the legal rights or liabilities of the commissioner of oaths
were affected – Justices of the
Peace and Commissioner of
Oaths Act 16 of 1963, s 10 and reg 7(1).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
NOT REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
CASE NO.:
2022/1538
In the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Applicant
and
MAKAULA,
BONKE SIGNORA
First
Respondent
CHIDI,
BOITUMELO
Second
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
The Standard Bank of South
Africa Ltd v Makaula & Another
(Case
No: 2022/1538) [2023] ZAGPJHC 519
(19 May
2023)
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by e mail and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be 24 February 2023.
JUDGMENT
VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
:
[1]
Sitting in the unopposed motion court in two weeks during February
2023, I was faced with various
applications for default judgment
where the Applicants were banks and the affidavits in support of such
applications were commissioned
by attorneys of firms of attorneys who
acted for such banks in other applications for default judgment. In
other words, it would
transpire that XYZ attorneys would be the
attorneys of record of ABC Bank in one matter and then in another
application for default
judgment they would be the commissioner of
oaths of the very same bank.
[2]
I had raised my concerns as to whether affidavits commissioned by
attorneys under these circumstances
(who were clearly on the panel of
the banks and thus commissioning the affidavits of their clients,
albeit not in the same matters
in which they represented them)
complied with the peremptory provisions of Regulation 7(1) (see
Royal
Hotel, Dundee, and Others v Liquor Licensing Board, Area No 26;
Durnacol Recreation Club v Liquor Licensing Board Area, No
26
1966 (2) SA 661
(N) (“
Royal Hotel
”) at 670E –
G) of the Regulations governing the administering of an oath or
affirmation made in terms of Section 10
of the Justices of the Peace
and Commissioner of Oaths Act 16 of 1963 and published under
GN R12258 in GG3619 of 21 July 1972,
as amended (“the
regulations”), which provides that:
“
A
commissioner of oaths shall not administer an oath or affirmation
relating to matter in which he has interest.”
[3]
I expressed my
prima facie
view that I did not believe that
they did. Many of the applications were removed from the roll, but on
23 February 2023 in the
above matter, pursuant to taking an
instruction, the Applicant persisted in seeking an order for default
judgment in circumstances
where the founding affidavit was
commissioned by an attorney who practised at a firm of attorneys who
is on the panel of the Applicant.
The matter was stood down to the
following day for argument and to allow Ms Latif, who appeared most
ably for the Applicant, to
prepare heads of argument. Ms Latif
referred me to a decision by Daffue J in
Nedbank Limited v
Hattingh and Others
(4136/2020)
[2022] ZAFSHC 44
(7 March 2022)
(“
Hattingh
”) where in an application for summary
judgment the same point was taken and rejected as follows at
paragraph 16:
“
The
mere fact that the two firms of attorneys featuring herein may be on
the plaintiff’s panel of attorneys, cannot be used
in support
of a responsible submission that they are not functioning totally
independent from each other. In fact, there can be
no doubt that they
are completely independent from each other. I cannot see on what
conceivable basis could it be held that attorney
Steensma has an
interest in the present litigation, or that she would want to, or
could have influenced the deponent in regard
to the issue at hand.
Notwithstanding my request, the 4
th
defendant’s counsel could not provide me with any authorities
in support of her submissions. The facts in Radue and authorities
relied upon are clearly distinguishable from the facts in casu and
consequently, I am not bound to follow any of these judgments.”
[4]
As is thus not quite apparent from the judgment of
Hattingh
itself, to what extent, if any, the learned judge was referred to
Royal Hotel
[or the other decisions to which I shall refer to
later herein – albeit that these decisions were referred to in
Radue Weir Holdings Ltd t/a Weirs Cash & Carry v Galleus
Investments CC t/a Bargain Wholesalers
1998 (3) SA 677
(E)
(“
Radue
”) and
Radue
itself] being authority
for the proposition that the commissioner of oaths was not entirely
independent and unbiased in the outcome
of the summary judgment
application of her client (albeit not her matter for that client).
[5]
After argument and a very constructive debate with Ms Latif, I
permitted her to provide me with
supplementary heads of argument,
which was provided to me on 14 March 2023, and I express my gratitude
to her therefor. I had sought
to be addressed on the following
authorities:
(a)
Radue
;
(b)
Bondev
Midrand (Pty) Limited v Ndlangamandla NO and Others
(38331/2015)
[2016] ZAGPPHC 939 (11 November 2016) (“
Bondev
”);
(c)
Ferreira
and Another v Nedbank Limited and Another
(45240/16)
[2017] ZAGPJHC 357 (24 November 2017) (“
Ferreira
”);
(d)
Ida Oosthuizen Immigration Practitioner CC & Others v DG of
the Dept. of Home Affairs & Another
(84727/2017) [2018]
ZAGPPHC 204 (10 April 2018) (“
Ida Oosthuizen
”);
(e)
NB Developments & Others v Cargo Loading Solutions (Pty) Ltd &
Others
(26823/2018) [2018] ZAGLDJHC (6 August 2018) (“
NB
Developments
”); and
(f)
with particular emphasis on the decision of
Royal Hotel
.
[6]
In
Bondev
, albeit in my view by virtue of
obiter
dictum,
Prinsloo J held a similar view as that of Daffue J. In
Ferreira
Pather AJ held as follows at paragraph 29:
“
Turning
to the defences raised in the founding affidavit, these can only be
described as bald and fictitious. Regulation 7(1) in
respect of
commissioners of oaths provides that a commissioner of oaths “shall
not administer an oath or affirmation relating
to a matter in which
he/she has an interest”. To suggest that the attorney who
commissioned the first respondent’s
affidavit and who is
employed by the firm of attorneys who are part of the first
respondent’s panel of attorneys/conveyancers,
has an interest
in the matter against the applicants, is far-fetched. In the course
of their legal work for the first respondent,
the firm probably deals
with many such matters in a day. And it is not known whether the
commissioner of oaths is one of the conveyancers
who works in that
department. This is similar to the first applicant’s spurious
attack on the attorney acting on behalf of
the first respondent’s,
blaming her for his poor handling of his “urgent”
application.”
[7]
By reason of the conclusion to which I come to in this judgment, it
is not necessary for me to
specifically deal with
Ida Oosthuizen
or
NB Developments
but suffice it to state that those
decisions were in line with
Royal Hotel
and
Radue
. My
concern with the judgments in
Hattingh
,
Bondev
, and
Ferreira
is that none of them dealt with the very persuasive
reasoning of the full bench decision in
Royal Hotel
.
[8]
In
Royal Hotel
Caney J (writing on behalf of the full bench)
held that “…
a commissioner of oaths is required to
be impartial and unbiased in relation to the subject matter of the
affidavit and that, if
he is otherwise, he has an interest in the
matter.”
and that “
That the interest hit at by the
regulations is not only a pecuniary or proprietary one is indicated
by The Master v Benjamin, N.O.,
1955 (4) SA 14
(T), in which an
affidavit by the Master was held to contravene reg. 1 (i) because it
had been attested by the Assistant Master.”
(at 659G –
H).
[9]
The interest that an attorney may have in a matter of a client where
that attorney was not the attorney
of record was cogently explained
by Caney J as follows at 668H – 670A:
“
Mr.
Hunt urged on us the case of S v van Schalkwyk,
1966 (1) SA 172
(T).
In that case HILL, J., said that the question whether the attorney
functioning as commissioner of oaths had an interest in
the subject
matter was a question of fact to be decided in the light of the
relevant circumstances. With respect, I agree
with this, but when an attorney so functions in a matter in which he
is acting on
behalf of his client, that fact requires the question to
be answered in the affirmative because, for reasons which I shall
state,
the attorney's interest is closely associated with his
client's interest. The facts of the case abovementioned were that an
attorney,
a member of a firm of attorneys generally acting for a
company which owned a newspaper and which contemplated publishing in
it
the contents of a certain affidavit, examined the deponent on the
contents of the affidavit he was about to swear and informed
him that his purpose in doing so was to ensure that the allegations
in it were correct, with a view to protecting the newspaper
against
any infringement of the Prisons Act; he translated portions of the
affidavit into Afrikaans for the deponent and made certain
amendments
where required by the latter. He then attested the affidavit when the
deponent executed and swore to it before him.
HILL, J., took
the view that the only interest the attorney had in the affidavit was
'to ensure as far as
possible that the deponent understood the contents and that the
allegations were true'
and this type of
interest, he held, did not invalidate the affidavit. BOSHOFF, J.,
took the view that from the fact that the attorney
had a professional
and pecuniary interest in performing his mandate in respect of the
affidavit itself, it did not follow that
the affidavit related to a
matter in which he had an interest. It appears to me, however, with
respect to the members of the Court
who decided that case, that the
attorney attested an affidavit relating to a matter in which his
client had an interest, namely
the publication of information, and
his interest was to protect his client in that matter; the
continuance of the relationship
of attorney and client, and,
therefore, his income from that relationship, depended upon his
protecting his client's interests
in the matters he handled on its
behalf. (The question is not whether the commissioner of oaths has an
interest in the affidavit
he attests, but whether he has an interest
in the matter to which the affidavit relates). If, on the other hand,
the attorney was
not acting for the proprietor, the decision does not
touch the present case. Coming to answer the first question, whether
an attorney
acting for the party in a matter has an interest in that
matter which precludes him from functioning as commissioner of oaths
to
attest an affidavit, it appears to me that, approaching the matter
upon a realistic basis, it is not possible to hold that he has
not an
interest in the matter. An attorney practises his profession for
gain; he carries on his practice to make a living, albeit
he submits
to and is bound by professional rules of conduct. In the course of
carrying on his practice, he has an interest to earn
fees and in each
matter to which he gives attention, that is an interest attributable
to him. In addition, and even where he acts
pro Deo or pro amico, he
has an interest to improve, increase and consolidate his goodwill,
which is a valuable thing; it is to
his interest in this respect to
bring his client's affairs, whether litigious or otherwise, to a
successful conclusion - 'success
breeds success'. Not only,
consequently, has he these financial interests in any matter in which
he is acting, but, because it
is to his interest to bring his
client's affairs to a successful conclusion, he cannot be impartial
and unbiased; if he functions
as a commissioner of oaths in the
matter, he is not independent. Those selfsame considerations, which
operate in the evidential
rule against his functioning, operate
equally under the regulations.”
[10]
With great respect to the learned judges in the
Bondev, Ferreira
and
Hattingh
matters, the reasoning put forward for their
conclusions is unconvincing, especially when juxtaposed to the
reasoning of the Full
Bench in
Royal Hotel
, which was
subsequently also followed by Marais J (as he then was) in
Papenfus
v Transvaal Board for the Development of Peri-Urban Areas
1969
(2) SA 66
(T) (“
Papenfus
”) at 70 to 71 and
Ida
Oosthuizen
and
NB Developments
. I align myself fully
with such reasoning and cannot find any fault therein. For example,
should attorney X act for Mr A
in his divorce, may he commission Mr
A’s affidavits in commercial litigation where Mr A is claiming
a large some of money
against a third party, but is represented by
attorney Y therein, or
vice versa
? I do not believe that the
attorneys would be impartial and unbiased under such circumstances,
and why should this differ from
an attorney on the panel of a bank?
Any advice or changes that may be notionally suggested by the
commissioner of oaths may well
impress the bank and that attorney may
stand to obtain more work from the bank, even at the expense of the
attorney of record.
This, with respect, answers the criticisms in
Bondev
,
Ferreira
, and
Hattingh
.
[11]
Whilst there is much to be said for the statement of Daffue J at
paragraph 17 of
Hattingh
that “
In my view, courts
should ensure that disputes are dealt with on their merits and
technical defences that merely cause delay and
nothing else should be
frowned upon and dismissed.”
I cannot disagree with what
was said by Marais J in
Papenfus
at 70H:
“
The
fact that compliance with the prescribed procedure is often of a
sketchy nature is no reason why our Courts should relax their
watchfulness in this respect. Slackness on the part of commissioners
of oaths should rather tend to encourage judicial strictness.”
The peremptory
requirement of Regulation 7(1) is a matter for the legislature and
executive (who is empowered to promulgate regulations)
and should not
be encroached upon by the courts.
[12]
However, despite my unhesitating view as to the correctness of the
decisions in
Royal Hotel
and
Radue
, I was reminded when
considering the judgment of Caney J that I am nonetheless constrained
to find to the contrary. This
is so as Caney J referred to the
matter of
S v Van Schalkwyk
1966 (1) SA 172
(T) (“
Van
Schalkwyk
”) where the Full Bench of the Transvaal
Provincial Division (as it then was) found that the “
interest”
referenced in Regulation 7(1) necessitated a pecuniary interest or an
interest in a proprietary right or an interest by which the
legal
rights or liabilities of the commissioner of oaths were affected (at
175F – 176F and 180C).
[13]
Sitting as a single judge, I am bound by a previous decision of a
full bench of this division (see
North Vaal Mineral Co Ltd v
Lovasz
1961 (3) SA 604
(T) 607G). This is so due to the
doctrine of
stare decisis
– even if I am of the view
that the decision of a full bench in another division is the one that
ought to be preferred (see
Ex parte
Hetzler
1969
(3) SA 90
(T) 94 A – B). This constraint is a fundamental
important one of the doctrine of judicial precedent as a matter of
the rule of law, and even if the decision is clearly wrong, it must
be followed. See
Potgieter v Olivier and Another
2016 (6) SA
272
(GP)) where Unterhalter AJ (as he then was) said the following at
paragraph 27 (footnote omitted):
“
Residually
it was argued by Mr Ferreira that I might nevertheless escape the
binding authority of Friend on the basis that it is
fundamentally
flawed, and in any event, it is not a case that has yet been reported
in the law reports. I do not consider myself
to enjoy such liberty.
The Constitutional Court has recently affirmed the fundamental
importance of adherence to precedent as an
attribute of the rule of
law. A binding decision, even if judged wrong, must be followed.”
[14]
Thus, whilst
Van Schalkwyk
seems
at odds with the decision of by
The
Master v Benjamin, N.O.
1955 (4) SA 14
(T) (relied upon by Caney J
op cit
)
the latter was a judgment of a single judge and was a least drawn to
the court’s attention in
Van
Schalkwyk
and thus it cannot be said
that
Van Schalkwyk
was
decided
per incuriam
.
Van Schalkwyk
has not been overturned and in fact seemingly referred to with
approval in
Kouwenhoven v Minister of
Police and Others
(888/2020)
[2021]
ZASCA 119
(22 September 2021) at paragraph 32 (fn 23). In this
judgment the Supreme Court of Appeal also criticised
Papenfus
insofar as it had invoked and extended
the old evidentiary rules of England but does not appear to have
overruled the principles
as enunciated in
Royal
Hotel
and then applied in
Papenfus
insofar as the regulations are
concerned.
[15] In
the circumstances I conclude that I am bound by the decision of
Van
Schalkwyk
to the effect that the interest of an attorney (acting
as commissioner of oaths) of a client in litigation where that
commissioner
of oaths is not the attorney of record in the matter in
which the affidavit is commissioned, does not have pecuniary interest
or
an interest in a proprietary right or an interest by which the
legal rights or liabilities of the commissioner of oaths were
affected
and accordingly I grant default judgment against the First
and Second Defendants, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other
to be absolved as follows:
a)
Payment of the amount of R1 110 950.94;
b)
Interest on the amount referred to
immediately above at the rate of 7.99
%
per annum from 14 DECEMBER 2021 to date
of payment,
both
dates inclusive;
c)
That the immovable property described as:
A
UNIT CONSISTING - SECTION NUMBER 15 AS SHOWN AND MORE FULLY DESCRIBED
ON SECTIONAL PLAN NO. SS269/2012 IN THE SCHEME KNOWN AS
MARSH ROSE IN
RESPECT OF THE LAND AND BUILDING OR BUILDINGS SITUATE AT COUNTRY VIEW
EXTENSION 1 TOWNSHIP, LOCAL AUTHORITY: CITY
OF
JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
OF
WHICH SECTION THE FLOOR AREA,
ACCORDING TO THE SAID SECTIONAL PLAN, IS 171 (ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY
ONE) SQUARE METRES IN EXTENT;
AND AN UNDIVIDED SHARE IN THE COMMON
PROPERTY IN THE SCHEME APPORTIONED TO THE SAID SECTION IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE PARTICIPATION
QUOTA
AS
ENDORSED
ON
THE
SAID
SECTIONAL
PLAN HELD BY DEED OF TRANSFER NUMBER
ST44766/2012
, is declared executable
for the aforesaid amounts;
d)
The issuing of a writ of execution in terms
of Rule 46 as read with 46A for the attachment of the Property is
authorised;
e)
A reserve price is set for the sale of the
property, at the sale in execution, at R1 016 507.46;
f)
The Defendants are to be advised through
service of this order that the provisions of
Section 129
(3) and (4)
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
applied to the Default Judgment
granted in favour of the Plaintiff. The Defendants may prevent the
sale of the property described
above, if they pay the Plaintiff all
of the arrear amounts owing by them to the Plaintiff, together with
the Plaintiff’s
permitted default charges and reasonable costs
of enforcing the Agreement up to the time of reinstatement;
g)
The arrear amount and enforcement costs
referred to in paragraph (f) above may be obtained from the
Plaintiff. The Defendants are
to be advised through service of this
order advised that the arrear amount is not the full amounts of the
judgment debt, but the
amounts owing by the Defendants to the
Plaintiff, without reference to the accelerated amounts;
h)
Cost of suit on the attorney and client
scale.
H
P VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division
Johannesburg
Date heard
: 24 February
2023
Judgment delivered
: 19 May 2023
Appearances:
Counsel
for Applicant: Adv N Latif
Instructed
by: Stupel
&
Berman Inc
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Standard Bank Of South Africa Limited v Master Of The High Court, Johannesburg and Others (012167/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 981 (1 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 981High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Kantilal (2024/091608) [2025] ZAGPJHC 918 (15 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 918High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Standard Bank of South Africa v Regenergy (Pty) Ltd and Another (2022/060849) [2025] ZAGPJHC 388 (22 April 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 388High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Brazen Freight SA (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/101129) [2025] ZAGPJHC 532 (30 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 532High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Olympia Development CC and Others (39324/2021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 976 (29 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 976High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar