Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 741South Africa
Transaction Capital Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSS Crushers Support Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (34954/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 741 (28 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 June 2023
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 741
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Transaction Capital Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSS Crushers Support Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (34954/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 741 (28 June 2023)
Transaction Capital Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSS Crushers Support Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (34954/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 741 (28 June 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_741.html
sino date 28 June 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
34954/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
28.06.23
In
the matter between:
TRANSACTION
CAPITAL BUSINESS SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
CSS
– CRUSHERS SUPPORT SERVICES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
JACOBUS
REINIER FOURIE
Second
Respondent
HESTER
CATHARINA FOURIE
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Mia, J
[1]
This is an application for relief in the
following terms:
1. Payment of the sum of
R109 602.61;
2. Interest on the amount
of R109 602.61 at prime plus 8% calculated daily and compounded
monthly in arrears on a 365-day year,
from 25 May 2021 to date of
final payment;
3. Costs of suit on the
attorney and client scale.
[2] The applicant, a
credit provider, seeks judgment against the first respondent as the
principal debtor as well as the second
and third respondents as
sureties and co-principal debtors. The respondents oppose the
application and have filed a counterapplication
seeking the following
relief:
a.
requesting a full account supported by
documents and vouchers of all of first respondent’s debtors
ceded to the applicant
either collected as an asset or non-asset debt
or in respect of which full collection remains outstanding, as well
as monies received
and disbursed as part of the invoice discounting
and debtor maintenance service provided by the applicant to the first
respondent
during the period 1 November 2018 to date pursuant to the
Memorandum of Agreement dated 6 March 2017;
b.
that the applicant be ordered to debate the
said account with the first respondents from the date it was
rendered;
c.
that the applicant be ordered to make
payment forthwith to the first respondent following the debate of the
account of whatever
amount appears to be due to the first respondent;
d.
that in the event that the parties are
unable to agree upon the outcome following the debate, they are
ordered to jointly prepare
a list of issues and to set the matter
down for debate in court in which event the court will decide the
matter of whether any
monies are owed by the applicant to the first
respondent and if so the quantum thereof;
e.
the parties are given leave to approach the
court for further directions on the same papers, duly supplemented if
need.
[3] The applicant is
Transaction Capital Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd, a company duly
registered in accordance with the company
laws of the Republic of
South Africa, with its registered office at 26 Metlife Centre, 7
Walter Sisulu Avenue, Cape Town Wester
Cape Province. Its principal
place of business is 9 Long Street, Cape Town Western Cape. The
applicant was previously known as
Rand Trust Financiers (Pty) Ltd.
The first respondent is CSS- Crushers Support Serves (Pty) Ltd, a
private company with limited
liability with its registered office at
40 Sieg Kuscke Street, Sybrand Van Niekerk Park, Meyerton, Gauteng.
The second respondent
is Mr. Jacobus Reinier Fourie, an adult male
businessman, residing at […]Meyerton, which address is his
domicilium citantandi et executandi
. The third respondent is
Mrs. Hester Catherina Fourie an adult female businesswoman who
resides at[…], Meyerton, which
is her
domicilium citandi et
executandi.
[4] The following factual
matrix is common cause or at least not seriously refuted The
applicant and first respondent, represented
by the second respondent,
entered into a written revolving credit facility agreement. In
terms of the agreement, the applicant
made a credit facility
available to the first respondent in the amount of R 1 500 000. The
interest rate was prime plus eight percent.
There was no provision
for an initiation fee or a monthly service fee. A review fee was
applicable. The contract provided for default
costs, including but
not limited to tracing fees, debt collectors fees, attorneys fees on
an attorney-client scale and collections
costs.
[5] According to the
agreement, a default occurred in the event the respondent failed to
make a payment on the due date, failed
to comply with an obligation
in terms of the agreement and persists in such failure. Default also
occurred in the event of an act
of insolvency, or where the
respondent was commercially insolvent, or where the respondent is
liquidated provisionally or finally,
or steps are taken to commence
business rescue proceedings. A further determination of a default is
where there is a material deterioration
in the first respondent’s
position as determined by the applicant reasonably exercising its
discretion. The agreement also
made provision for a certificate of
balance signed by a director of the lender to determine the
indebtedness of the first respondent.
The certificate of balance was
to serve as a liquid document.
[6] In its founding
affidavit the applicant stated that it made available the amount of
R1 500 000 to the first respondent in terms
of the agreement, the
first respondent breached the agreement by failing to make payment in
terms of the agreement. On 27 March
2020, it sent a notification to
the first respondent, advising that it was entitled to demand
repayment. It advised the first respondent
of the arrear account and
demanded payment of the outstanding amount within 30 days by 26
April 2020.
[7] On 15 April 2020, the
applicant sent a letter to the first respondent repeating the demand
in the first notice and informed
the first respondent of the
applicant’s election to call up the amounts due. The
applicant afforded the first respondent
the option of paying the full
amount by 26 April 2020 or sixty days post the upliftment of the
lockdown, namely 30 June 2020. The
demand was repeated on 29 April
2020 and on 17 June 2020. A further option was afforded to the first
respondent to either make
payment according to the first two options
alternately to convert the revolving credit facility to a fixed loan
facility over a
period not exceeding twenty-four months.
[8] On 22 January 2021,
the applicants, through its attorney, reiterated the demand,
including costs and interest. This did
not result in a
settlement. Consequently, the applicants demanded R1 033 533.86
within seven days from the date of demand.
On 21 May 2021, the
applicant calculated the outstanding balance to be R 1 092 602.61
together with interest calculated
at prime plus eight percent
calculated daily and compounded monthly. The applicant relied on a
certificate of balance attached
to the affidavit and cancelled the
agreement.
[9] The second respondent
bound himself as surety
in solidum
as a co-principal debtor
jointly and severally with the first respondent for the full amount.
The surety was fully enforceable
despite that the first
respondent might be placed in liquidation, business rescue,
sequestration or curatorship. The respondents
opposed the
application raising five defences, namely that the respondent was not
in default and the revolving facility could not
be called up;
secondly, that the respondent has a damages claim against the
applicant for prematurely calling up the revolving
credit facility;
the third defence, that there may be monies owed to the first
respondent in terms of the invoice discounting
agreement and this is
to be set-off against the amount due in terms of the credit facility;
the fourth defence, that the
first respondent has a counter
application seeking the rendering of an account and debatement in
respect of the invoice discounting
agreement; and finally that the
applicant’s certificate of balance was not signed by one of its
directors.
[10] The parties
agreed that the following issues were to be determined:
10.1 whether the
applicant made out a case for relief?
10.2 whether a
dispute of fact exists requiring the matter to be referred to oral
evidence/trial?
10.3
whether set off can be applied?
[11] The first issue for
determination is considered in relation to the agreement which the
applicant has attached the founding
affidavit. The respondents raised
a number of defences in relation thereto. The defences are considered
below.
[12]
The first defence that the first respondent was not in default of its
monthly repayments and that the credit facility could,
therefore, not
have been lawfully called up as it is disputed by the applicant. The
applicant’s response to the first respondents
defence is that
the credit facility can be called up on demand and that it was not
necessary for the applicant to prove prior default
on the part of the
first respondent. The applicant placed reliance on two decisions:
Damont
NO v Van Zyl
[1]
and
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Inv 132 (Pty) Ltd
[2]
.
The Court in
Trinity
Asset Management
held
at para [102] that:
“…
[T]he
long-standing common-law rule that a loan without stipulation as to a
time for repayment is 'repayable on demand'. But what
does 'repayable
on demand' mean? The court said that 'although by no means
linguistically clear', the phrase means that 'no specific
demand for
repayment is necessary and the debt is repayable as soon as it is
incurred'. The practical effect is this. When suing
for repayment the
creditor doesn't need to allege a demand: demand is not part of the
plaintiff's cause of action. After considering
English, Canadian,
Australian and New Zealand law, the court held that, unless the
parties agree otherwise, a loan 'repayable on
demand' is repayable
from the moment the advance is made and that no specific demand for
repayment need be made for the loan to
be immediately due and
repayable.”
[13]
Clause 7 of the agreement provides that the
outstanding
amount must be repaid in full on the expiry of the facility term as
set out in Part A of the loan schedule. Part A provided
for monthly
payment via debit order. The first respondent contends that the
facility was linked to an invoice discounting
and debtor management
agreement in terms of which the applicant collected debts on behalf
of the first respondent. The applicant
did not account fully to the
first respondent for monies owing to the first respondent in respect
of purchased invoices and collected
invoices which amount to a
substantial sum. The sum due to the first respondent is well over the
amount due to the applicant by
the first respondent. The first
respondent relies, in any event, on the defences raised.
[14] According to the
first respondent, the applicant required the invoice discounting
agreement to be linked to the revolving credit
facility as security
and to ensure payment as it would have cession of the book debts. The
parties never intended that the revolving
credit facility would be
payable by the first respondent from any other sources. The revolving
credit facility would provide for
repayment in instalments of R23 250
by way of a fluctuating number of instalments. The applicant was
entitled to set off any
amount owing by the first respondent by any
amount due by the applicant to the first respondent in terms of
clause 8 of the agreement.
[15]
The first respondent indicates that only in the event of default
could the applicant cause a written notice to be sent calling
for an
acceleration of the payment of the amount outstanding. The revolving
credit facility did not provide for an acceleration
of payment due
under the agreement in the discretion of the applicant and without
cause. Thus the first respondent contends the
true nature of the
revolving credit facility was a loan which the applicant was entitled
to pay off at the agreed rate of instalment
of R 23 250. In
so far as the applicant alleges the first respondent is in default,
it relies on an agreement appended
to its replying affidavit. An
applicant cannot make out a case in its replying papers. This issue
alone is dispositive of the application,
and I need not address any
of the other defences raised by the first respondent. Moreover, the
applicant contends it has complied
with the relief sought in the
counterapplication in prayer (a) and tenders relief sought in prayers
(b), (c), (d) and (e) in view
thereof, there appears to be a dispute
with regard to the amount due to the applicant and the amount due to
the first respondent
in terms of its counterclaim. The first
respondent has requested that the issues be referred for oral
evidence. The applicant did
not disclose this in its founding
affidavit. An applicant who chooses to proceed by way of application
must establish its case
in the founding affidavit to enable the
respondent to properly respond thereto. The Court said in
Molusi
and Others and Voges No and and others
[3]
at
para [18]
“
It
is settled law that the purpose of pleadings is to define the issues
for the parties and the court. In application proceedings,
the
affidavits do not only constitute evidence, but they also fulfil the
purpose of pleadings. In other words, they must set out
the cause of
action in clear and unequivocal terms to enable the respondent to
know what case to meet. This is the reason why an
applicant is never
permitted to change colours which he/she has pinned to the mast and
plead a new cause of action in a replying
affidavit. (See
Diggers
Development
(
Pty
)
Ltd
v City of Matlosana and another
[2012]
1 All SA 428
(SCA)
at
paragraph 18 –
Naidoo
v Sunker
[2012] JOL
28488
(SCA)).
A party is duty bound to allege in his or her affidavit all the
material facts upon which it relies.”
[16]
In
Digger
Development (Pty) v City of Matlosana and Another
[4]
the
Court said at para [18]
Before
dealing with the issues we must express our disapproval in the manner
in which the appellant compiled its founding affidavit.
It is trite
that in motion proceedings affidavits serve not only to place
evidence before court but also to define the issues between
the
parties. In
Minister of Land Affairs and Agriculture and
others v D and F Wevell Trust and others
2008 (2) SA 184 (SCA)
1
at paragraph 43 [also reported at
[2008] JOL 21213
(SCA) –
Ed] Cloete JA stated:
“
It
is not proper for a party in motion proceedings to base an argument
on passages in documents which have been annexed to the papers
when
the conclusions sought to be drawn from such passages have not been
canvassed in the affidavits. The reason is manifest -
the other party
may well be prejudiced because evidence may have been available to it
to refute the new case on the facts. The
position is worse where the
arguments are advanced for the first time on appeal. In motion
proceedings, affidavits constitute both
the pleadings and the
evidence.”
[17] In view of the first
respondent’s counterclaim and the tender made by the applicant,
the relief sought by the first respondent
is necessary in order to
determine what is due. The first respondent disputes that there has
been a full account rendered with
supporting documentation and
invoices. Thus, it is necessary to refer the matter to oral evidence.
[18] Consequently, I
grant the following order:
IT
IS ORDERED THAT:
1. That the applicant
shall render a full account within 30 (thirty) days from the date of
this order, supported by all supporting
documents and vouchers for
each transaction of all the first respondent’s debtors ceded to
the applicant and either collected
as an asset or non-asset debt or
in respect of which full collection remains outstanding, as well as
all monies received and disbursed
as part of the invoice discounting
and debtor maintenance service provided by the applicant to the first
respondent during the
period 06 March 2017 to date of this order.
1.1. The account
described in 1 hereof to be debated until finality as per the prayers
set out in the respondents’ Notice
of the Counter Application
dated 26 October 2021.
2. That the following
aspects as per the application and the counter application be
referred to Trial:
2.1.Whether the applicant
acted in terms of the Revolving Credit Facility Agreement by claiming
that the full outstanding amount
was due and payable upon demand.
2.2.Whether the
applicant’s actions in claiming that the full amount was due
and payable amounted to repudiation of the Revolving
Credit Facility
Agreement.
2.3.Whether the amount
due, if any, following the statement and debatement as per prayer 1
hereinabove is capable of being set-off
against the applicant’s
claim as sought in the main application.
2.4.Costs of the action.
3. That the cost of the
opposed application is hereby reserved for final determination by the
Trial Court.
SC Mia
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:
J.P
Steenkamp
instructed
by
BDP
Inc
For
the Respondents:
J.
Prinsloo
instructed
by
A
Prinsloo Attorneys
Heard:
1 February 2023
Delivered:
28 June 2023
[1]
Damont
NO v Van Zyl
1962 (4) SA 47 (C)
[2]
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Inv 132 (Pty) Ltd
2018 (1) SA 94 (CC)
[3]
Molusi
and Others and Voges No and and others
[2015]
3 All SA 131 (SCA)
[4]
Digger
Development (Pty) v City of Matlosana and Another
[2012] 1 All SA 428
(SCA)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Transactional Capital Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd v MT Nkabz Holdings and Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (2020/19360) [2023] ZAGPJHC 47 (16 January 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 47High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Transaction Capital Business Solutions (PTY) Ltd v Busi Ntuli Communications (PTY) Ltd and Others (27105/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 783 (12 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 783High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
International Pentacostal Holiness Church (IPHC) v Minister of Police and Others (2021/14237) [2023] ZAGPJHC 82 (3 February 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 82High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Lucic (2022/6034) [2023] ZAGPJHC 768 (6 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 768High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Gqwede (576/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 274 (15 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 274High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar