Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 833South Africa
Absa Bank Ltd v Afeess Import and Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (2019/21032) [2023] ZAGPJHC 833 (27 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 July 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Absa Bank Ltd v Afeess Import and Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (2019/21032) [2023] ZAGPJHC 833 (27 July 2023)
Absa Bank Ltd v Afeess Import and Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (2019/21032) [2023] ZAGPJHC 833 (27 July 2023)
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sino date 27 July 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2019/21032
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In the application by
AFEESS IMPORT AND
EXPORT (PTY) LTD
FIRST
APPLICANT
KHUMALO, ALFRED
SECOND
APPLICANT
AND
ABSA BANK LTD
RESPONDENT
In
re the matter between
ABSA BANK LTD
PLAINTIFF
and
AFEESS IMPORT AND
EXPORT (PTY) LTD
FIRST
DEFENDANT
KHUMALO, ALFRED
SECOND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Summary
Rescission of judgment
– Rule 42(1)(a) – order to which a party was procedurally
entitled cannot be said to have been
granted erroneously
Order
[1] In this matter
I make the following order:
1.
The application for rescission is dismissed;
2.
The applicants are ordered to pay the costs of the
application, jointly and severally the one paying the other to be
absolved, on
the scale as between attorney and client.
[2] The reasons for
the order follow below.
Introduction
[3] This is an
application for the rescission of a default judgment granted by the
Court against the applicants (then the
defendants) on 25 May
2021. The application is brought in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of Court. It is alleged
therefore that the judgment was
granted erroneously or was sought erroneously by the respondent.
[4] The claim
against the two applicants was based on a loan agreement entered into
by the respondent (the plaintiff) and
the first applicant, and a deed
of suretyship signed by the second applicant. The second applicant is
the sole director of the
first applicant.
Rule 42(1)(a)
[5] The summons in
the action proceedings that preceded the application for default
judgment was served at the first applicant’s
registered address
and at the second applicant’s chose
domicilium citandi et
executandi
. The applicants say that the Court papers never came
to their attention as the first applicant does not carry on business
at its
registered address and the second applicant does not reside at
his chosen
domicilium citandi et executandi
.
[6]
Service at
a registered address of a company is good service.
[1]
Service at a chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
is
likewise good service.
[2]
[7]
An order is
not granted erroneously or sought erroneously when the plaintiff or
applicant was entitled procedurally to the order.
See
Freedom
Stationary (Pty) Ltd & Others v Hassam & Others
[3]
.
[8] It follows that
the Court order was not granted in error or sought in error, and the
applicants’ reliance on Rule
42 must fail.
Rule 31(2)(b) and the
common law
[9]
The
applicants do not rely on Rule 31(2)(b) or the common law but I would
be inclined to grant an order for rescission if a proper
case for
rescission under the rule or the common law could be identified on
the papers. This would require good cause to be shown.
Good cause
encompasses a reasonable explanation for the default as well as a
bona
fide
defence.
[4]
[10]
I
n
Grant
v Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
[5]
Brink
J was dealing with an older Rule of Court
[6]
that also required good or sufficient cause in the Free State
Division of the High Court. He said:
“
Having
regard to the decisions above referred to,
[7]
I am of opinion that an applicant who claims relief under Rule 43
should comply with the following requirements:
(a)
He must give a
reasonable explanation of his default
. If it
appears that his default was wilful or that it was due to gross
negligence the Court should not come to his assistance.
(b)
His application must be
bona fide
and not made with
the intention of merely delaying plaintiff's claim.
(c)
He must show that he has
a bona
fide defence
to
plaintiff's claim. It is sufficient if he makes out a
prima
facie defence
in the
sense of setting out averments which, if established at the trial,
would entitle him to the relief asked for. He need not
deal fully
with the merits of the case and produce evidence that the
probabilities are actually in his favour. (Brown v Chapman
(1938
TPD 320
at p. 325).”
[emphasis
added]
[11]
One
of the cases referred to by Brink J is
Cairns'
Executors v Gaarn
[8]
where Innes JA (as he then was) said:
“
It
would be quite impossible to frame an exhaustive definition of what
would constitute sufficient cause to justify the grant of
indulgence.
Any attempt to do so would merely hamper the exercise of a discretion
which the Rules have purposely made very extensive
and which it is
highly desirable not to abridge. All that can be said is that the
applicant must show, in the words of COTTON,
L.J. (In re Manchester
Economic Building Society (24 Ch. D. at p. 491))
'something
which entitles him to ask for the indulgence of the Court'.
What that something is must be decided upon the circumstances of each
particular application.”
[emphasis
added]
[12]
Good cause
includes, but is not limited to the existence of a substantial
defence.
[9]
It is therefore
necessary to determine whether there is a satisfactory explanation of
the delay, and whether the appellant raised
a
bona
fide
and substantial defence.
[13] In the
application papers the applicants rely on a cession of life policies
to the respondent and it was argued that
the cession amounted to a
suspensive condition that precluded the respondent from instituting
the action. There is simply no basis
in contract or authority for
this proposition.
[14]
Reference
is also made to an acknowledgment of debt but it is acknowledged
[10]
in the applicants’ heads of argument that the settlement did
not constitute a novation of the original debt.
[15] The applicants
fail on both grounds. Neither a reasonable explanation nor a bona
fide defence are discernible on the
papers.
[16] For the
reasons set out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered: This judgement
was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose name is reflected
and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of the judgment
is deemed to be
27 JULY 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS:
R
BALOYI
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TSHABALALA
ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
MS
K MITCHELL (heads of argument by B VAN DER MERWE)
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TIM
DU TOIT & CO INC
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
24
JULY 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
27
JULY 2023
[1]
See
Rule 4(1)(a)(v),
s
23(3)
of the Companies
Act,71
of 2008
,
Federated
Insurance Co Ltd v
Malawana
1986
(1) SA 751 (A)
759E–G,
Chris
Mulder Genote Ing v Louis Meintjies Konstruksie (Edms) Bpk
1988
(2) SA 433
(T),
and
Arendnes
Sweefspoor CC v Botha
2013 (5)
SA
399 (SCA) para [30].
[2]
See Rule 4(1)(a)(iv) and
Amcoal
Collieries Ltd v Truter
1990
(1) SA 1
(A) 5J–6B.
[3]
2019
(4) SA 459
(SCA) para [18].
[4]
See the cases referred to by Van Loggerenberg and Bertelsmann
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
2022, Vol 2, D1-564 to 565, footnotes 33 and 49.
[5]
Grant
v Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
1949
(2) SA 470
(O) 476–7.
[6]
Rule 43 (O.F.S.).
[7]
The Judge referred to
Joosub
v Natal Bank
1908
TS 375
,
Cairns'
Executors v Gaarn
1912
AD 181
,
Abdool
Latieb & Co v Jones
1918
TPD 215
,
Thlobelo
v Kehiloe
(2)
1932 OPD 24
,
Scott
v Trustee, Insolvent Estate Comerma
1938
WLD 129
, and
Schabort
v Pocock
1946
CPD 363.
[8]
Cairns'
Executors v Gaarn
1912
AD 181
at 186.
[9]
Silber
v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1954
(2) SA 345
(A) 352G.
[10]
Quite correctly. See
Rodel
Financial Service (Pty) Ltd v Naidoo and another
2013
(3) SA 151
(KZD) para [12]
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