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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 728
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## South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited v Govindpershad (5835/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 728 (26 June 2023)
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Limited v Govindpershad (5835/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 728 (26 June 2023)
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sino date 26 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 5835/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN SECURITISATION
PROGRAMME
(RF) LIMITED
Plaintiff/
Applicant
And
PRELENE
JAGLAL – GOVINDPERSHAD
Defendant
/
First
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MIA, J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff seeks summary judgment for
payment of the amount of R 115 405.14, based on a Master Rental
Agreement (the agreement)
between the cedent, Safin Bank Limited
(Sasfin) and the defendant on 24 December 2018. The amount is
in respect of (i) purported
outstanding rentals for the period 25
August 2020 – 25 October 2021; and (ii) future rentals for the
remaining duration of
the Master Rental Agreement (“the Claim”)
for telephonic equipment rented by the defendant. The defendant
resisted
summary judgment and raised three defences, namely
cancellation of the agreement, further, she disputed that she was in
arrears
and contended that Sasfin did not perform in terms of the
agreement. The third defence raised was that she had no knowledge of
the rights, title and interest as the cession was not properly
pleaded.
[2]
During the hearing of the matter, counsel
were requested to file supplementary submissions in view of questions
which arose, namely,
the applicability of the Notice to Exempt Banks
from the Provisions of Section 14 of the Act published under GN 532
in GG 34399
of 27 June 2011 (“the Gazette notice”); and
the applicability of the unreported decision of
South
African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Fullimput 11 (Pty) Ltd
to the present matter regarding
the applicable order to be granted in relation to the return of the
equipment to the plaintiff upon
payment of the outstanding balance,
in the event that plaintiff’s request for summary judgment is
granted. I am indebted
to both counsel for the supplementary
submissions filed herein.
Background facts
[3]
On 24 December 2018 the defendant, a
medical practitioner entered into an agreement with Sasfin, to lease
equipment for a period
of 60 months from 19 January 2019. The
defendant contends that she cancelled the agreement on or about 12
May 2020, in terms of
section 14(2)(b)(i) of the Consumer Protection
Act 68 of 2008 (“the
Consumer Protection Act&rdquo
;) which
afforded her 20 business days to cancel. The cancellation of the
agreement, accordingly, became effective on 17 June 2020.
Issue for
determination
[4]
The issue for determination is whether the
defendant raised a bona fide defence in resisting summary judgment.
Submissions
[5]
In support of the application for summary
judgment, counsel for the applicant submitted that clause 3 of the
agreement stipulated
that Sasfin sold its rights as follows:
“…
all
of the Seller’s right, title and interest in and to each of the
Specified equipment leases, subject to the provisions
of this
Agreement.”
[1]
.
Thus,
he continued that the agreement does not amount to a delegation which
he submitted was a form of novation
[2]
and a form of a cession. Thus in the present matter, there is
only an agreement of cession
[3]
of Sasfin’s rights in terms of the master rental agreement. The
agreement remained between Sasfin and the defendant. Sasfin
only
ceded its right, title and interest in the master rental agreement.
The defendant thus retained the right to cancel in terms
of
section
14
of the CPA and this right the defendant could exercise against
Sasfin, not the plaintiff.
[6] In relation to use of
the word “bank” counsel submitted the plaintiff was
precluded from use as it is an offence
to use the name of a “bank”
in terms of section 22 of the Banks Act, 94 of 1990, unless the
entity is in fact registered
as a bank. Section 22(4) of the Banks
Act provides:
“
(4)
Any person who, in connection with any business conducted by such
person- (a) uses any name, description or symbol indicating,
or
calculated to lead persons to infer, that such person is a bank
registered as such under this Act; or (b) in any other manner
purports to be a bank registered as such under this Act, while such
person is not so registered as a bank, shall be guilty of an
offence”
[7] In
response to the question posed to counsel was whether banks were
exempt from the application of s 14 of the CPA, counsel
for the
plaintiff submitted that banks were and referred to the Government
Notice 532 in Government Gazette 34399 of 27 June 2011.
Counsel
continued and submitted that apart from being exempt, Sasfin was not
the supplier as contended by the defendant but the
financier. Thus,
the defendant was not permitted to withhold payments due to defects
as she had a claim against the supplier of
the equipment and was
obliged to pay Sasfin who was out of pocket in the interim for the
payment it had made to the supplier of
the equipment.
[8] Counsel for the
plaintiff confirmed that the goods had, in the interim, been returned
in October 2022 after the plaintiff launched
its application for
summary judgment in May 2022. In view of the initial order proposed,
counsel proposed that the order make provision
for the return of the
goods upon full payment of the amounts due.
[9] In opposing the
application, counsel for the defendant also confirmed the return of
the leased equipment on 7 October 2022.
In view of the return of the
goods, counsel argued that the order proposed by the plaintiff cannot
include the return of the rental
equipment. This was counsel
submitted because the only remedies available to the plaintiff are
those contained in section 3 of
the CPA, specifically the reasonable
cancellation penalty. He submitted that the plaintiff was entitled
only to arrear rental amounts,
and the defendant disputed that it was
in arrears as it cancelled the agreement. The plaintiff was not
entitled to any interest
counsel continued.
[10]
The defendant relied on the principle in
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
[4]
which states:
“
Where
the defence is based upon facts, in the sense that material facts
alleged by the plaintiff in his summons, or combined summons,
are
disputed or new facts are alleged constituting a defence, the Court
does not attempt to decide these issues or to determine
whether or
not there is a balance of probabilities in favour of the one party or
the other. All that the Court enquires into is:
(a) whether the
defendant had “fully” disclosed the nature and grounds of
his defence and the material facts upon which
it is founded, and (b)
whether on the facts so disclosed the defendant appears to have, as
to either the whole or part of the claim,
a defence which is both
bona fide and good in law. If satisfied on these matters the Court
must refuse summary judgment either
wholly or in part, as the case
may be.”
[11]
Having regard to the defendant’s affidavit resisting summary
judgment, the defendant’s assertion is that she was
not in
arrears at the time of cancellation in 2020. If the agreement were
cancelled, the defendant would not be liable for future
rentals in
terms of the agreement. Counsel submitted the defendant’s
defences raised, indicated that summary judgment be
refused.
[5]
This was because her defences indicated that there is a reasonable
possibility that the defences she advanced may succeed at trial.
[12] I have noted the
plaintiff’s contention that the bank is exempt from the
application of s14 of the Consumer Protection
Act 68 of 2008 (CPA)
in terms of Government Notice 532 in Government Gazette 34399
of 27 June 2011. However, in having regard
to the purpose of the CPA
and the Government Gazette, the purpose of exempting the bank from
the application of s14 could not have
the intention of depriving the
consumer of the protection afforded in the CPA. Nor could it deprive
the consumer of its right to
cancel granted in terms of s14. Section
14 2(b)(i) of the CPA permits consumers to cancel any fixed-term
agreement without
reason by giving 20 business days' notice.
[13]
The defendant did cancel the agreement which was a 'fixed-term
agreement provided for in the
Consumer Protection Act. Upon
cancellation the defendant remained liable to the supplier in terms
of the agreement up to date of cancellation and the plaintiff
can
impose a reasonable cancellation penalty with respect to goods
supplied in contemplation of the agreement enduring for
the
intended term. However, it must credit the defendant with any amount
that remains due to the defendant at the date of cancellation.
In
view of the goods being returned in October 2022 and the application
for summary judgment being issued in May 2022, the calculation
could
not reasonably have taken proper account of
section 14(3)
(a) and
(b). The amount claimed by the plaintiff cannot be correct as
per the plaintiff certificate of balance. It follows
that he
defendant is entitled to a proper accounting and has reasonably
entered a defence. I have noted also that the
Consumer Protection Act
ensures
that a supplier does not unlawfully place a limitation on the
rights of a consumer afforded to it by the Consumer Protection
Action.
On the contrary,
sections 51(a)
and (b) of the
Consumer
Protection Act, provides
specifically for what is known
as the ‘trumping provisions.
[6]
The purpose is to avoid contractual exclusion or limitation of the
consumer's rights.
[14] The third defence
raised by the defendant was that the plaintiff received only
the reversionary interest, namely the
defendant’s obligation to
perform under the contract and not the interest in the cessionary
after the cedent satisfies the
secured debt. The extent of the rights
vested does not extend to transferring ownership of the ceded right
outrightly to the cessionary.
On this basis the defendant avers that
the plaintiff has not set out in full the indebtedness. It has not
set out on what basis
the purported cession entitles it to recover
contractual damages arising out of the agreement. She contends she
has no knowledge
of the cession by the cedent to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff is required to the prove the cession and the extent
thereof. Moreover,
she states that she was not notified of the
cession and that she, without knowledge of the cession, continued to
tend to its obligations
in attempt to discharge of her indebtedness.
[15] I am satisfied that
the defendant has raised defences which are
bona fide
and good
in law and there is a reasonable possibility that the defences she
advanced may succeed at trial.
[16] Consequently, I make
the following order:
Order
The application for
summary judgment is dismissed with costs.
SC MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:
Adv.
J G Botha
instructed
by
ODBB
INC.
For
the Respondent:
Adv.
N. Moyo
instructed
by
Africa
and Associates
Heard:
30 January 2023
Delivered:
26 June 2023
[1]
Record,
Caselines 001-45, Particulars of Claim, Annexure “SAS2”,
clause 3.1
[2]
Delegation
is a form of novation by which, by tri-partite agreement, between
all concerned, a third party is introduced as debtor
in substitution
of the original debtor, who is discharged. (See: Van Achterberg v
Walters
1950 (3) SA 734
(T) at 745; Jacobz v Fall
1981 (2) SA 863
(C) at 868G to 869H.)
[3]
Cession
involves a substitution of a new creditor (the cessionary) for the
original creditor (the cedent), the debtor remaining
the same.
Cession is sometimes described as a form of novation but differs
from novation in not requiring consent of the debtor
and in not
resulting in a new contract to replace the existing one. See
Christie’s Law of Contract in South Africa (7th
Edition) at
page 537. Assignment is generally used in our law to denote a
transfer of both rights and obligations. Stepping into
another’s
shoes involves acquiring its rights which can be done by cession
without the debtor’s consent, and undertaking
its obligations,
which can be done by delegation with the creditor’s consent.
Since the lesser is included in the greater,
it follows that the
whole process of substitution cannot take place without the consent
of the other party to the contract, which
consent may be given in
advance. See Christie above at page 546.
[4]
1976
(1) SA 418
(A) at 426 A-D
[5]
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976 (2) SA 226
(T); He & She
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Brand NO
2019 (5) SA 492
(WCC) at 497B
[6]
51
Prohibited transactions, agreements, terms or conditions
(1) A supplier must not
make a transaction or agreement subject to any term or condition if—
(a) its general purpose
or effect is to—
(i) defeat the purposes
and policy of this Act;
(ii) mislead or deceive
the consumer; or
(iii) subject the
consumer to fraudulent conduct;
(b) it directly or
indirectly purports to—
(i) waive or deprive a
consumer of a right in terms of this Act;
(ii) avoid a supplier’s
obligation or duty in terms of this Act;
(iii) set aside or
override the effect of any provision of this Act; or
(iv)
authorise the supplier to—
(aa) do anything that is
unlawful in terms of this Act; or
(bb) fail to do anything
that is required in terms of this Act;”
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