Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 610South Africa
FirstRand Bank Limited t/a Wesbank v Govendor (2021/ 25131) [2023] ZAGPJHC 610 (1 June 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Credit agreement concluded by electronic means. The defendant failing to comply with the contract and plaintiff claiming the return of the motor vehicle which is the subject of the credit agreement. Contract concluded electronically in terms of section 13 of the Electronic Transaction Act.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## FirstRand Bank Limited t/a Wesbank v Govendor (2021/ 25131) [2023] ZAGPJHC 610 (1 June 2023)
FirstRand Bank Limited t/a Wesbank v Govendor (2021/ 25131) [2023] ZAGPJHC 610 (1 June 2023)
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sino date 1 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2021/ 25131
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
01/06.23
In
the matter between:
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED T/A WESBANK
Plaintiff
And
LEON
GREGORY GOVENDER
Defendant
NEUTRAL
CITATION:
Firstrand Bank Limited
t/a Wesbank vs Leon Gregory Govendor
(Case Number: 2021/25131) [2023] ZAGPJHC 610 (1 June 2023)
Delivery:
This judgment was delivered
electronically by means of email to the legal representatives of the
parties and uploaded on caselines.
The judgment is deemed to be
delivered on 1 June 2023.
Summary:
Credit agreement concluded by
electronic means. The defendant failing to comply with the contract
and plaintiff claiming the return
of the motor vehicle which is the
subject of the credit agreement. Contract concluded electronically in
terms of section 13 of
the Electronic Transaction Act.
Legal effects of
contracts concluded electronic means discussed. Application of
section 4 of the Regulation of Interception of Communications
Act.
The recording of the telephone conversation between the defendant and
the plaintiff’s call centre accepted into evidence.
JUDGMENT
Molahehi
J
Introduction
[1]
The
plaintiff, in this action, seeks an order directing the defendant to
return the motor vehicle described as 2016 BMW X5 XDRIVE30D
M-SPORT
A/T (F150 (the vehicle) to it and further that he pays for the
damages consequent to the breach of the purchase and sale
agreement
between the parties.
[2]
The
essential terms of the agreement, set out in the particulars of
claim, were as follows:
"6.2.
The total purchase price, including finance charges, payable by the
defendant was the sum of R1,553,249.10 which amount
would be payable
in monthly instalments of R17,902.50 payable from the 1st day of
November 2016 for a period of 71 months subject
to interest there on
calculated at a variable interest rate of prime 1.5%- per annum. A
final balloon payment would be payable
at the conclusion of the
agreement term;
6.3.
The plaintiff would remain the owner of the vehicle until all amounts
due under the agreement have been paid in full."
[3]
The
agreement further provided for what could happen should the defendant
breach any of the terms of the agreement. In that event,
the
plaintiff would be entitled to take the following actions:
"7.1
Claim immediate payment of the outstanding balance together
with the interest and all amount owing and claimable
by the
plaintiff, irrespective of whether such amounts are due at that
stage,
7.2.
Take possession of the vehicle in terms of an attachment order and;
7.3
Retain all payments made the defendant in terms of the agreement and,
7.4.
Claim as liquidated damages payment of the difference between the
balance outstanding and the market value of the vehicle,
which amount
shall be immediately due and payable."
[4]
The
plaintiff contends that it has complied with its obligations under
the contract, in particular, that of having delivered the
vehicle to
the defendant in accordance with the terms of the agreement. It
further avers that it had to institute these proceedings
because the
defendant breached the contract by failing to make the full and or
punctual payments of the amount due under the agreement
and is
accordingly in arrears in respect of the instalment owing and has
remained in default for at least twenty business days.
[5]
The
plaintiff instituted this action following the defendant's failure to
surrender the vehicle to it as contemplated in terms of
the
provisions of section 127 of the National Credit Act.
[6]
The
plaintiff further avers that it has complied with the provisions of
section 129(1)(a) of the National Credit Act (NCA),
[1]
by serving notice on the defendant's
domicilium
address
by the registered post on 29 April 2021.
[7]
The
defendant filed a notice to defend the claim and, in his plea, denies
having entered into the sale agreement with the plaintiff,
which, as
will appear later, was alleged to have been signed online or
electronically. He further contends that there was no compliance
with
section 13 of the Electronic Communication and Transactions,
(ECTA).
[2]
[8]
The
defendant further pleaded that the vehicle sale was concluded with
his former employer and brother-in-law, Mr Claude Bolus Azar,
without
his consent.
The
plaintiff's case
[9]
In
support of its case, that it is entitled to the relief sought, the
plaintiff presented its version through two witnesses, Ms
Herold and
Ms Hlongwane.
[10]
Ms
Herold was, at the relevant time, until 2018, employed as finance and
insurance manager by the plaintiff. She is currently self-employed.
Her testimony focused on the general process undertaken by a dealer
when a customer wishes to purchase a motor vehicle through
a loan
from the plaintiff. She testified that in the present instance, the
defendant would have arrived at the dealership and been
assisted by a
sales consultant in identifying and choosing the vehicle he wished to
purchase.
[11]
She
further testified that the appearance of her name on the iContract
means that she is the one who dealt with the defendant. Furthermore,
the plaintiff's watermark stamp in the middle of each contract page
proves that the defendant signed the contract electronically.
This,
according to her, means that the defendant received an SMS or email
containing a link to register his details on the documents
from the
plaintiff. After that, the defendant would have received a number
generated by the electronic system known as the One
Time Pin (OTP),
which allowed him to choose his communication with the plaintiff,
namely through email or SMS. The OTP would also
allow the defendant
access to the iContract. This process would allow the defendant to
produce his identity documents and other
relevant documents after he
entered the OTP in his phone, ensuring that he was the only one who
would have access to the contract.
[12]
The
witness conceded during evidence in chief that there were instances
in which the salesperson on the dealership floor would hand
documents
to process to the customer. She, however, emphasized that she always
insisted that the salesperson should provide her
with all the
original documents.
[13]
During
her employment with the plaintiff, she dealt with about 5000 clients,
and in 2016 she facilitated the contract between the
defendant and
the plaintiff. She pointed to the defendant in court and contended
that she was satisfied with his identity documents.
[14]
The
plaintiff's second witness Ms Hlongwane is an employee of the
plaintiff and a qualified attorney employed as the plaintiff's
specialist in dealing with legal matters. She acquired knowledge of
this matter from reading the documents and studying the plaintiff's
electronic system.
[15]
Ms
Hlongwane testified that she never met the defendant, nor did she
have any discussion about the matter with the first witness.
She had
listened to the audio recording discovered in the supplementary
discovery affidavit of the plaintiff. She concluded from
listening to
the audio recording that it was apparent that the defendant was the
person who purchased the vehicle in question and
paid the monthly
instalment for four years. She testified that there was no evidence
from the documents or the electronic system
that suggested that the
contract was concluded between the defendant's brother-in-law and the
plaintiff. There was also, according
to her, no evidence of the
arrangement between the defendant and his brother-in-law about the
purchase of the vehicle.
[16]
The
witness insisted that a contract was concluded between the plaintiff
and the defendant electronically through the process described
earlier by the first witness. According to the witness, this was
further supported by what was said by the defendant in the audio
recording, where he (the defendant) made arrangements to pay for the
vehicle for four months through the monthly debit of his bank
account.
[17]
Ms
Hlongwane insisted during cross-examination that the contract between
the plaintiff and the defendant was in compliance with
the ECTA.
Accordingly, there is a valid electronic contract concluded between
the parties.
The
defendant's case
[18]
At
the relevant time, the defendant was employed as a factory manager at
Home Building Investment and Marketing, trading as Kmart,
owned by
his brother-in-law, Mr Azar. He disputed having signed the electronic
contract upon which the plaintiff claims ownership
of the vehicle and
the right for its return.
[19]
He
said that he discovered the existence of the contract when his bank
account was debited. He further testified that he found that
the
debit was for the payment of the vehicle purchased by his
brother-in-law, Mr Azar, who took his identity book, salary advice
slips, and insurance documents and arranged for the purchase of the
car from the dealership through the loan from the plaintiff.
[20]
The
witness testified that upon discovering that a motor vehicle had been
purchased and had been paid through a debit order from
his account,
he confronted his brother-in-law, who owned up that he had purchased
the motor vehicle from the plaintiff in the defendant's
name.
[21]
According
to the defendant, Mr Azar undertook to ensure that the funds were
placed in his bank account to cover the motor vehicle
payment.
[22]
The
defendant did not deny having had possession of the cell phone
through which the OTP was posted but contended that it was a
company
phone to which Mr Azar also had access. This means that Mr Azar could
have activated the OTP and electronically signed
the contract.
[23]
The
defendant conceded that the identity document and the driver's
license used as part of the necessary documents in the purchase
the
vehicle belonged to him.
The
legal consequences of an electronic contract
[24]
In
our law, the uncertainty of the contracts concluded electronically
was settled with the passing of the ECTA. The ECTA governs
both the
electronic contracts and the signatures placed on them. The process
of facilitating electronic transactions is dealt with
in Chapter 3
Part 1 of ECTA.
[25]
Section
12 of ECTA provides that where the law requires that information or
documents be in writing such a requirement is satisfied
if the
electronic information or contract satisfy the following
requirements:
(a)
be in the form of a data message, and
(b)
accessible in a manner usable for subsequent reference.
[26]
The
effect of the provisions of the ECTA is that data messages or
electronic signatures are now recognized in our law as equivalent
to
a proper basis upon which a written contract can be concluded. Thus,
a valid written contract can be concluded electronically.
[27]
The
same requirements as those applicable for a valid contract under the
common law apply to contracts entered into online or those
concluded
through data messages. The requirements are, among others:
(a)
An offer and acceptance.
(b)
The agreement must be legal.
(c)
The terms of the agreement must be clearly spelt out.
[28]
As
indicated earlier, one of the defences of the defendant is that the
plaintiff did not comply with the provisions of the ECTA.
Section 11
of the BECTA provides:
"(1)
Information is not without legal force and effect merely on the
grounds that it is wholly or partly in the form of a data
message."
[29]
Section
13 of a ECTA provides:
"(1)
Where the signature of a person is required by law, and such law does
not specify the type of signature that requirement
in relation to it
to permit data message is met only if an advanced electronic
signature is used."
(2)
Subject to subsection (1), an electronic signature is not without
legal force and effect merely on the grounds that it is an
electromagnetic form.
(3)
Where an electronic signature is required by the parties to an
electronic transaction and the parties have not agreed on the
type of
electronic signature to be used, that requirement is met in relation
to a data message if –
(a)
a method is used to identify the person and to indicate the presence
approval of the information communicated; and
(b)
Having regard to all the relevant circumstances at the time the
method was used. The method was as reliable as was appropriate
for
the purpose for which the information was communicated.
(4)
where an advanced electronic signature has been used, such signature
is regarded as being a valid electronic signature and to
have been
applied properly unless the contrary is proved.”
[30]
The
other point raised by the defendant relates to the telephone
conversation recording, which was discovered in the supplementary
discovery affidavit by the plaintiff.
[31]
The
issue of the use of the audio recordings used by the plaintiff in
these proceedings is governed by section 4 (1) of the Regulation
of
Interception of Communications Act (RICA), which provides:
“
(I) Any person,
other than a law enforcement officer, may intercept any communication
if he or she is a party to the communication.
unless such
communication is intercepted by such person for purposes of
committing an offence.”
Evaluation
and Analysis,
[32]
It
is apparent from the plaintiff's particulars of claim that its cause
of action is based on a breach of the written electronic
contract,
which was signed by way of electronic means. The written contract was
attached to the particulars of claim as required
by rule 18 of the
Uniform Rules of the High Court.
[33]
As
indicated above, the defendant's defence is that the contract was
concluded unlawfully in his name by his brother-in-law. He
states in
his plea that:
“
The
Defendant further pleads that his former employer, Mr Claude Bolous
Azar, is the person who dealt with the Plaintiff in relation
to this
matter, and it
appears
contracted
without the Defendant’s consent, in the name of the Defendant.”
(underlining).
[34]
In
my view, the facts presented before this court do not support the
version of the defendant. The defendant did not become aware
of the
transaction at the point when the plaintiff issued the summons. He
became aware of the transaction long before the institution
of these
proceedings. He took no step to reverse the alleged illegal conduct
of his brother-in-law. He did not report the matter
to the relevant
authorities. The allegation that Mr Azar, who has since passed away,
misrepresented the defendant is not supported
by any evidence. In the
absence of evidence to support this allegation, the only conclusion
to draw is that the defendant concluded
the contract with the
plaintiff.
[35]
The
allegation that the contract was unlawfully concluded by Mr Azar is
further unsustainable when regard is had to the following
facts
presented by the defendant:
(a)
he allowed the monthly payments of the vehicle to continue being
debited from his bank account even after discovering what the
alleged
to be an unlawful transaction concluded by his brother-in-law in his
name.
(b)
he only stopped paying for the vehicle eight months after the death
of Mr Azar.
[36]
The
explanation as to how he managed to pay for the vehicle before the
death of Mr Azar is unsustainable. In relation to the payment
before
the death of Mr Azar, the explanation is that Mr Azar used to deposit
the amount of R10,000 in his bank account. He does
not, however,
provide any evidence to support this allegation. It
should be
noted that the monthly instalment in terms of the contract is
R17,902.50.
[37]
The
explanation of how he sustained the payment after the death of Mr
Azar is also unsustainable. He initially testified that he
never
applied for COVID-19 relief from the plaintiff in as far as the
monthly payment of the vehicle was con,cerned. He later contradicted
this by stating that he did receive the COVID-19 relief from the
plaintiff. The allegation that he received financial support from
the
family members was also not substantiated.
[38]
It
is important to note that the defendant did not dispute any of his
documents used in the conclusion of the transaction, and that
includes, in particular, the copy of his identity document and the
driver's license.
[39]
I
turn now to deal with the issue of the recording of the telephone
conversations between the defendant and the plaintiff's call
centre.
[40]
The
contention of the defendant that the evidence relating to recording
telephone conversation with the call centre should not be
considered
because he was not warned that it might be used in court is also
unsustainable. He did not dispute that he was informed
that the
conversation was recorded. He volunteered the information that is
destructive to his case based on the contention that
he is not the
one who concluded the sale agreement with the plaintiff. In this
regard, it is quite clear from the recordings that
he conceded that
he had concluded the contract and that he sought an arrangement to
pay for the motor vehicle.
[41]
In
my view, there is no basis to conclude that the recording did not
comply with the RICA.
Conclusion
[42]
There
is overwhelming evidence that the defendant concluded the credit
agreement for the purchase of the vehicle from the plaintiff.
He
breached the contract by failing to pay the monthly instalments. The
plaintiff is accordingly entitled to cancel the contract
and claim
the return of the motor vehicle, including payment of damages
consequent to the breach of the contract.
[43]
Regarding
compliance with section 129 (1) of the National Credit Act, there is
no doubt from the papers that the plaintiff issued
the notice and
served it on the defendant at the
domicilium
chosen by the defendant.
Order
[44]
In
the premises, the following order is made:
1.
The purchase and sale of the motor vehicle described below between
the plaintiff and the defendant is cancelled.
2.
The defendant is directed to forthwith return the motor vehicle
described as 2016 BMW X5 XDRIVE30D M-SPORT A/T (F150) to the
plaintiff.
3.
Failing to comply with the above order the Sheriff of this Court or
his deputy is authorised, directed and empowered to attach,
seize the
vehicle described above wherever he may find same and hand over to
the plaintiff.
4.
The claim for damages suffered by the plaintiff consequent the breach
of the contract by the defendant is postponed
sine
die
pending the return of the
vehicle to the plaintiff, its evaluation and sale.
5.
The interest on the amount is to be paid at the prescribed rate from
20 April 2021.
6.
The defendant is to pay the costs.
E MOLAHEHI
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT,
Gauteng Division,
JOHANNESBURG
Representation:
For
the plaintiff:
Adv
J Govender
Instructed
by:
Smith
van der Walt Attorneys
For
the defendant:
Adv
Zimerman
Instructed
by:
Taitz
Skikne Attorneys
Date
heard: 28 February 2023
Date
delivered: 1 June 2023.
[1]
Act
number 34 of 2005.
[2]
Act
number 25 of 2002.
sino noindex
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