Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 701South Africa
ARB Electrical Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd v De Jager Electrical Maintenance CC and Another (2022/20849) [2023] ZAGPJHC 701 (14 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 June 2023
Headnotes
judgment application in terms of which the applicant seeks an
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## ARB Electrical Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd v De Jager Electrical Maintenance CC and Another (2022/20849) [2023] ZAGPJHC 701 (14 June 2023)
ARB Electrical Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd v De Jager Electrical Maintenance CC and Another (2022/20849) [2023] ZAGPJHC 701 (14 June 2023)
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sino date 14 June 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2022/20849
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In
the matter between
ARB
ELECTRICAL WHOLESALERS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
DE
JAGER ELECTRICAL & MAINTENANCE CC
First
Respondent
DE
JAGER, TOBIE DANIEL
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COPPIN J
[1] This is a
summary judgment application in terms of which the applicant seeks an
order (as foreshadowed in the combined summons)
against the second
respondent for payment: (a) of the sum of R1,633,888-66; (b) interest
on that amount at the rate of 2% per month
(being the maximum
permissible rate in terms of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
) from
1 April 2022 to date of final payment; and (c) costs of suit to be
taxed on the scale as between attorney and client.
[2] The second
respondent, who had filed a joint plea with the first respondent, is
opposing the application.
[3] In terms of the
applicant’s particulars of claim the applicant and the first
respondent, duly represented by the
second respondent, concluded a
written agreement in terms of which the applicant extended credit
facilities to the first respondent,
which would purchase electrical
goods from it in terms of such agreement (the agreement).
[4] In terms of the
agreement the first respondent had to pay the applicant’s
usual, alternatively, reasonable price
for the goods purchased,
within 30 days of a statement rendered by the applicant to the first
respondent. In the event of the first
respondent not making a payment
of any amount on due date the full amount owing at the time of the
default would immediately become
due and payable and the first
respondent would also be liable to pay (a) interest of the maximum
permissible rate in terms of the
National Credit Act
[1
]
from the due date until the date of full and final payment; (b) any
legal costs incurred by the applicant in recovering any outstanding
amount, on the attorney and client scale. The agreement also
provided, inter-alia, that a certificate signed by a director of the
applicant would be
prima
facie
proof of the amount owing by the first applicant in terms of the
agreement.
[5] In terms of a
written suretyship agreement (the suretyship) the second respondent
bound himself as surety and co-principal
debtor with the first
respondent, for the due and punctual performance of the first
respondent’s obligations in terms of
the agreement. In terms of
the suretyship the second respondent, inter-alia, renounced the
benefits of excussion, division and
cession of actions, and the
suretyship also provides for the amount of indebtedness to be
prima
facie
established by means of a certificate signed by a director
of the applicant, and that the second respondent would be liable for
legal costs incurred by the applicant on the attorney and client
scale.
[6] In its
particulars of claim the applicant alleges that during February,
March, and April 2022 it sold and delivered electrical
goods to the
first respondent in terms of the agreement for a total amount of
R1,633,888-66, which the first applicant failed to
pay, despite the
amount been due and payable. It relies on a certificate of
indebtedness to prove the amount as contemplated in
the agreement.
The applicant further alleges that the respondent failed to respond
to its notice in terms of
section 129
of the
National Credit Act
although
it also alleges that the said provisions are not applicable
to the agreement by virtue of the provisions of
section 4(1)(a)(1)
,
alternatively
section 4(1)
(b) of that Act. Accordingly, in its
combined summons the applicant sought judgment against the
respondents jointly and severally
for the amount, the interest and
costs.
[7] In a joint plea
the first and second respondents, inter-alia, admitted the terms of
the agreement, the purchase and delivery
of the goods and the first
respondent’s indebtedness, but pleaded the following in effect:
(a) (i) that the first respondent
was in the process of being placed
under supervision in terms of the business rescue provisions of the
Companies Act, 2008
[2]
(the
Companies Act); (ii
) that the applicant was precluded from
instituting legal action for the recovery of the amount from the
first respondent in terms
of the moratorium envisaged in
section 133
of the
Companies Act; (iii
) the applicant was also precluded by the
moratorium from instituting legal action against the second
respondent for that debt;
and (iv) that the business rescue plan
(that was anticipated at the time) may in due course release the
first respondent in full
or in part from its debt.
[8] Further in
their joint plea the respondents denied that the second respondent
bound himself as surety and co-principal
debtor as alleged by the
applicant. The second respondent specifically denied that the
consequences of the suretyship had been
“explained” to
him, alternatively, he alleged that he was not informed (either
expressly, or tacitly) that by merely
signing the deed of suretyship
and the credit application form (i.e. the agreement) he would be
bound as surety, and particularly,
“jointly
in solidum
as surety and co-principal debtor in favour of” the applicant.
He also denied that he had been informed that by signing of
the deed
of surety ship he would be renouncing the benefits of excussion and
division. He also denied that the suretyship complied
with the
statutory requirements for validity, and ultimately that he was
liable for the debts of the first respondent.
[9] Ironically,
elsewhere in the plea, the respondents “admit that they are in
default and have been so for 20 business
days” and they further
admit that they “failed and/or neglected to pay the amount
mentioned”.
[10] In due time the
applicant brought the application for summary judgment only against
the second respondent. In the affidavit
filed in support of the
application the causes of action in the combined summons and the
amounts claimed are verified and the facts
set out therein are
confirmed and sworn to positively. The applicant further avers that
the respondents have no bona fide defence
to its claim and entered an
appearance to defend the claim and filed a plea solely for the
purposes of delay.
[11] It also appears from
the affidavit in support of summary judgment that the business rescue
practitioner appointed in respect
of the first respondent had
delivered a notice in terms of
section 141(2)(a)
of the
Companies Act
indicating
that there was no reasonable prospect of the first
respondent being rescued and that an application would be brought to
discontinue
the business rescue proceedings and to place the first
respondent in liquidation. The applicant accepted that in all those
circumstances
all legal proceedings against the first respondent were
suspended and therefore that it would only be persisting with its
claim
against the second respondent.
[12] The applicant,
inter-alia, denied that the second defendant enjoyed the protection
of the moratorium; contended that the second
respondent was properly
bound by the suretyship; that the suretyship was valid and that it
had been completed by the second respondent
(in his own hand) and
that the second respondent had no
bona fide
defence to its
claim against him.
[13] In his affidavit
resisting summary judgment the second respondent raised the following
defences: (a) that he enjoyed the protection
of the moratorium
envisaged in
section 133(2)
of the
Companies Act; (b
) the suretyship
was not valid because it does not comply with the legal requirements
for such a document to be binding on and enforceable
against him; (c)
effectively, that he did not believe that he was bound as surety
merely by signing the suretyship; (d) that the
suretyship was for an
unlimited amount and therefore the deed of suretyship did not
constitute a liquid amount; and lastly, (e)
the second respondent
(despite the admissions in the plea to that effect) denied that the
goods were delivered and collected by
the first respondent, i.e. he
denied that delivery ever occurred.
[14] At the hearing of
this application the second respondent’s counsel (correctly)
conceded that the defences relating to
the protection of the
moratorium and the validity and enforceability of the suretyship
against the second respondent, had no merit,
but persisted with the
latter two arguments or defences, namely those pertaining to the
liquidity of the deed of suretyship, and
the denial of the delivery
of the goods.
[15] In brief, regarding
the aspects conceded. In the absence of a specific provision in a
business rescue plan for the protection
of a surety of the company in
business rescue, the liability of the surety remains unaffected
thereby
[3]
. Further, the
requirements for a valid suretyship as envisaged in section 6 of the
General Laws Amendment Act
[4]
are met. The suretyship, in this instance, is in writing and it is
signed by the surety himself. The identities of the creditor,
the
debtor and the surety, as well as the nature of the amount of the
principal debt are all clearly reflected in the document.
The surety
agreement is therefore valid and binding. The second respondent not
only completed the spaces in the deed himself, but
the fact that it
constituted a suretyship agreement is apparent from the document
itself, and that fact is unmistakable. By appending
his signature to
the deed of suretyship the second respondent indicated his assent to
its contents. It is clear from the document
itself that it contains
contractual terms and the second respondent does not claim that he
could not read the document. He is bound
by its terms.
[16] Turning to the
defences that were persisted with. The defence regarding the delivery
of the goods clearly lacks merit. Firstly,
in their joint plea the
respondents admitted the purchase, delivery and the amount of
indebtedness. The second respondent does
not explain the
volte-face
in his affidavit resisting summary judgment. In any event, the actual
buyer, namely the first respondent, did not withdraw its
admission of
delivery made in the joint plea. The second respondent, even though a
co-debtor, was not the buyer of the goods and
his liability did not
stem from the agreement, but from the suretyship. He is being sued in
his capacity as surety
[5]
.
[17] In argument counsel
for the second respondent elaborated on the technical point of
liquidity as follows. She submitted that
the suretyship itself was
not liquid and that the certificate of balance, which would render
the amount claimed liquid, had not
been attached to the application
for summary judgment as is required in terms of Rule 32(2); that the
Rule was peremptory and that
the failure to attach the certificate
was fatal to the application. It was further argued that because the
remedy of summary judgment
is “extraordinary, very stringent
and closes the doors of the court to a defendant, a plaintiff seeking
such relief “must
comply with the requirements of Rule 32”.
[18] Counsel for the
applicant submitted in brief, that the claim was indeed for a
liquidated amount of money and was not based
on a liquid document and
that in any event the suretyship and the certificate of balance are
part of the combined summons and had
been verified and confirmed by
the applicant and that this defence was technical and opportunistic
and had been raised as a last
resort. Counsel for the applicant
further submitted that non-compliance with Rule 32(2) was, in any
event, condonable and that
the second respondent, who had no
bona
fide
defence, would not be prejudiced if the non-compliance were
to be condoned.
[19] Even though the
suretyship and certificate of indebtedness were not attached to the
affidavit they were attached to the particulars
of claim and the
causes of action in the combined summons (which include the
particulars of claim) were verified. Attaching them
again may have
been superfluous and unnecessary in the circumstances of this case.
The second respondent would not be prejudiced
by the fact that there
were also not attached to the affidavit. In fact, in his affidavit
resisting summary judgment the second
respondent did not raise this
issue. In any event, insofar as such an attachment may have been
necessary in terms of Rule 32(2),
the non-compliance is condoned
[6]
.
[20] The defences raised
by the second respondent are not
bona
fide
defences and are clearly merely dilatory. It would be remiss for this
court to allow such defences to defeat the applicant’s
claim
for summary judgment
[7]
.
[21] Accordingly an order
is granted in the following terms: The second respondent is ordered
to pay to the applicant the following:
(1) the amount of R1, 633, 888
– 64; (2) interest on that amount at the rate of 2% monthly
from 1 April 2022 to date of full
and final payment; (3) costs of
suit to be taxed on the scale as between attorney and client.
P COPPIN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
A
Scott
Instructed
by:
Lomas-Walker
Attorneys
Counsel
for the second respondent:
A
Granova
Instructed
by:
Wentzel
& Partners Attorneys
Date of Hearing: 6,7 June
2023
Date of Judgement: 14
June 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 on
14 June 2023
[1]
Act
34 of 2005.
[2]
Act
71 of 2008.
[3]
See,
inter
alia
,
New
Port Finance Co(Pty) Ltd and Another v Nedbank Ltd
2016 (5) SA 503
(SCA);
Investec
Bank Ltd v Bruyns
2012 (5) SA 430
(WCC);
Jeany
Industrial Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Zungu-Elgin Engineering
(Pty) Ltd
2020 (2) SA 504
(KZD);
Nedbank
Ltd v Zevoli 208 (Pty) Ltd
2017
(6) SA 318
(KZP);
African
Banking of Botswana v Kariba Furniture Manufacturers
2013
(6) SA 471
(GNP) par 69.
[4]
Act
50 of 1956.
[5]
Neon
and Cold Cathode Illuminations (Pty) Ltd v Ephron
1978
(1) SA 463 (A).
[6]
Nedcor
Bank Ltd v Lisinfo 61 Trading (Pty) Ltd
2005
(2) SA 432
(C) par 5;
ABSA
Bank v Botha NO & Others
2013 (50 SA 563
(GNP) par 16.
[7]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976
(10 SA 418
(A) 432.
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