Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1159South Africa
S.M.R v Nedbank Limited and Another (25017/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1159 (13 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 October 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S.M.R v Nedbank Limited and Another (25017/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1159 (13 October 2023)
S.M.R v Nedbank Limited and Another (25017/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1159 (13 October 2023)
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sino date 13 October 2023
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
25017/2019
Date
of Judgment:13 October 2023
Reportable?
No
Of
Interest to Other Judges? No
In
the matter between:
R,
S M
Applicant
And
NEDBANK
LIMITED
First
Respondent
SHERIFF,
KROONSTAD
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Mc
Aslin AJ:
1.
On 2 December 2019 the First Respondent
obtained default judgment against the Applicant and his former wife
to whom he was married
in community of property.
2.
The judgment arose from arrears owed in
terms of a credit agreement concluded between the parties for the
purchase of immovable
property situated in Kroonstad, which loan was
secured by a mortgage bond in favour of the Respondent.
3.
The judgment, as is usual in foreclosure
matters, was granted for the accelerated indebtedness under the loan
agreement, which was
in the amount of R944 849.35, together with
interest and costs. In addition, the immovable property that
was the subject
of the credit agreement was declared specially
executable.
4.
The First Respondent commenced execution
by placing the immovable property under attachment, but the property
has not yet been sold
in execution.
5.
On 14 October 2022 the Applicant
initiated an application, without joining his erstwhile spouse, for
the rescission of the judgment
in terms of Rule 31 of the Uniform
Rules of Court and for an order that the credit agreement was
reinstated pursuant to the payment
of the arrears.
6.
I was told the when the matter was heard
that the Applicant is divorced from his wife, and they are not on
speaking terms.
Consequently, the Applicant would not be
joining his wife in this application.
7.
The irretrievable breakdown of the
marriage is regrettable. However, the absence of Mrs P S R from
these proceedings is material
and I will deal with this issue later
in this judgment.
8.
It is not clear from the papers whether
the Applicant relies on Rule 31(2)(b) or Rule 31(6)(b) as the basis
for his rescission application.
9.
There is no evidence that the Applicant
has paid the judgment debt and interest thereon, and it is not
disputed that the taxed costs
of the First Respondent have not been
paid. Consequently, there is no basis on which the rescission
application can succeed
in terms of Rule 31(6)(b).
10.
Rule 31(2)(b) requires
inter-alia
that the application for rescission should be brought within 20 days
of the date when the Applicant learnt of the judgment against
him and
his former wife.
11.
There is no direct evidence of when the
Applicant acquired knowledge of the judgment. However, it seems
from the allegations
in the founding affidavit that the Applicant was
aware of the judgment before 31 March 2022.
12.
The application for rescission was only
instituted some 6 months later. Yet, there is no explanation
for the delay in instituting
the application.
13.
It is then not necessary to consider
whether good cause has been shown for the rescission of the judgment.
14.
Irrespective of whether the application
for rescission is brought in terms of Rule 31(2)(b) or in terms of
Rule 31(6)(b), the Applicant
fails to prove his case for rescission
and the relief sought in prayer 1 of the notice of motion cannot be
granted.
15.
However, in prayer 2 of the notice of
motion the Applicant asks that the credit agreement be reinstated on
the basis that he paid
the arrears on the credit agreement. In
other words, the Applicant relies on
section 129(3)
of the
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
(“the Act”).
16.
That provision reads as follows:
“
Subject
to subsection (4), a consumer may – (a) at any time before the
credit provider has cancelled the agreement re-instate
a credit
agreement that is in default by paying to the credit provider all
amounts that are overdue, together with the credit provider’s
permitted default charges and reasonable costs of enforcing the
agreement up to the time of re-instatement; and (b) after complying
with paragraph (a), may resume possession of any property that had
been repossessed by the credit provider pursuant to an attachment
order”
.
17.
The seminal decision on this section of
the Act is
Nkata v Firstrand Bank Ltd
2016 (4) SA 257
(CC) where Moseneke DCJ, speaking for the majority,
found the following: (i) the reinstatement of a credit agreement
occurs by
operation of law the moment the consumer pays all the
amounts that are overdue in terms of the credit agreement; (ii) the
default
charges and reasonable costs of enforcing the credit
provider’s rights under the agreement would be overdue if the
credit
provider has demanded their payment and, in the case of the
legal costs, the credit provider has taxed the costs where they have
not been agreed; and (iii) if a credit agreement is reinstated in
terms of the Act, the default judgment and subsequent attachment
of
the immovable property is rendered without force or effect.
18.
Thus, whilst
section 129(3)
of the Act
is not a basis on which to rescind a default judgment, it does
provide another avenue for rendering the judgment of
no force or
effect. Even in instances where the consumer has no defence to
the claim of the credit provider and any application
for rescission
in the ordinary course would fail, the consumer can still achieve the
same end provided he or she pays “
all
amounts that are overdue”
in
terms of the Act.
19.
It follows, therefore, that the success
of the relief sought by the Applicant in prayer 2 i.e. that the
credit agreement be reinstated,
turns on whether the Applicant paid
the amounts that were overdue in terms of the credit agreement.
20.
In opposing the application, the First
Respondent attempted to show that quite apart from the arrears that
were due under the credit
agreement, the Applicant had failed to pay
the First Respondent’s default charges and its taxed legal
costs so that
section 129(3)
cannot apply.
21.
There is no evidence that the First
Respondent demanded payment of its default charges from the
Applicant. In relation to
the legal costs, the evidence shows
that the First Respondent taxed its bill of costs
after
the Applicant says it paid the arrears, and the First Respondent
concedes in its answering affidavit that it has not yet demanded
payment of those costs from the Applicant.
22.
Consequently, counsel for the First
Respondent accepted during argument that the default charges and
legal costs were not overdue
when the Applicant says he paid the
arrears. The only issue then for consideration is whether the
Applicant has proven that
he paid the arrears that were due under the
credit agreement.
23.
It is well-established in our law that a
party who alleges payment bears the onus of proving the payment
(
Pillay v Krishna
1946 AD 946).
24.
In his founding affidavit the Applicant
says the following: “
After the
Court order, I proceeded to pay the arrears on the credit agreement
with the purpose of reinstate (sic) the agreement
… .
After I defaulted again on our credit agreement, the first respondent
despite the agreement being reinstated,
proceeded with [the]
execution process based on the 2019 order … . On 31
March 2022, the applicants again paid an
amount of R115 000.00
towards the bond account. A copy of the proof of payment is
attached hereto … “
.
25.
The Applicant mentions two payments.
The first one is alleged to have extinguished the arrears.
However, there is no
mention of when the payment was made. All
that is known is that it occurred sometime after the judgment was
granted against
the Applicant on 2 December 2019 but before the
second payment was made on 31 March 2022.
26.
The Applicant also fails to set out the
amount that was paid, and he attaches no documentary proof of what
the amount of the arrears
was when this payment was made or, for that
matter, of the payment itself.
27.
The first payment is a bald allegation
by the Applicant. It is denied by the First Respondent in its
answering affidavit,
and so the Applicant should have substantiated
the allegation in his replying affidavit with reference to documents
showing what
the amount of the arrears was, when the payment was made
and the amount of the payment. No replying affidavit was filed
by
the Applicant.
28.
In light of the above I find that the
Applicant has failed to discharge the onus on him of proving the
first payment that he alleges
he made.
29.
In relation to the second payment, the
Applicant furnishes the date and amount of the payment as well as
documentary proof of the
payment. These allegations are
admitted by the First Respondent.
30.
However, the Applicant does not set out
what arrears were due on 31 March 2022, nor does he allege that the
payment on that date
extinguished the arrears. For the detail
on the latter fact, the Applicant relies on an exchange of
correspondence between
the attorneys representing the parties.
31.
On 1 April 2022 the Applicant’s
attorney, Mr Mathebula, wrote to the Respondent’s attorney, Ms
Cowley, and stated
inter-alia
the
following:
“
We
confirm that our client has paid the arrears on the bond account in
the amount of R115 000.00 and therefore the bond is
up to date.
We therefore call upon your client to immediately thwart the
execution process. We (sic) regard to your
legal costs, we also
request that you attend to furnish us with the bill of costs to have
it taxed by the taxing master.
We shall attend to serve you
with the rescission application on the matter. Kindly attend to
confirm that your client will
stop the execution process.”
32.
Ms Cowley responded to Mr Mathebula on 5
April 2022 in the following terms:
The
sale in execution is not proceeding and we are instructing our costs
consultant to draft the bill of costs on the attorney and
client
scale (as agreed in the loan agreement, mortgage bond and in terms of
the judgment) for taxation as requested. The
bill of costs will
be presented to you shortly for consideration. Please serve
your client’s intended rescission application
on our offices on
behalf of our client. Service shall be accepted
electronically. Our client reserves the right to
oppose such
application should it deem it necessary to do so in order to protect
its rights. Our client’s rights are
fully reserved.”
33.
In argument Mr Mathebula relied heavily
on this exchange of correspondence and pointed out that Ms Cowley did
not deny his assertion
that the arrears had been paid.
Consequently, so the argument went, Ms Cowley must be taken to have
accepted, on behalf of
the First Respondent, that the arrears in the
amount of R115 000.00 had been paid, in which event the credit
agreement was
reinstated by operation of law.
34.
I have several difficulties with this
argument. Firstly, it is for the Applicant to prove that the
arrears were paid.
Yet, the amount of the arrears is never
disclosed by the Applicant.
35.
In that regard it needs to be noted that
according to the letter of demand that was sent by the First
Respondent to the Applicant
and his former wife on 4 April 2019, the
amount of the arrears was stated to be R101 513 .53.
The certificate of
indebtedness shows that on 1 June 2019 the amount
of the arrears was R121 665 31, which would have increased
by the monthly
instalment of R10 075.89 plus interest until
judgment was granted on 2 December 2019. Consequently, by the
time default
judgment was granted the arrears would have been in the
region of about R185 000.00
36.
It is inconceivable that almost 3 years
later the amount of the arrears was only R115 000,00 unless the
Applicant had paid
some of the debt. As set out above, the
Applicant alleges only one other payment, but he fails to prove
anything about the
payment.
37.
The second difficulty that I have with
the Applicant’s argument is that he relies on correspondence
from the First Respondent’s
attorney to prove that the arrears
were paid. Yet, there is no evidence to show that Ms Cowley
knew the amount of the arrears
on 5 April 2022.
38.
A further difficulty is that the
Applicant is not entitled to rely on isolated evidence that suits his
case. He must address
the complete version of the First
Respondent.
39.
In that regard Mr Van Zyl, who deposed
to the answering affidavit, is employed by the First Respondent and
would surely have known
what arrears were owed by the Applicant.
He denies that the arrears were paid by the Applicant, and on two
occasions states
quite pertinently that the credit agreement was not
reinstated.
40.
Presented with a clear denial that the
arrears had been paid, it was incumbent on the Applicant to sustain
his assertion in the
founding affidavit by putting up the proof in
reply. Yet, no replying affidavit was filed on behalf of the
Applicant.
41.
It is well established in our law that
the approach to disputes of fact in motion proceedings is that the
court must decide the
matter on the facts stated by the respondent,
together with those the applicant avers and the respondent does not
deny.
42.
On that approach I must resolve the
dispute as to whether the arrears were paid in the amount of
R115 000.00 by accepting the
version of the First Respondent,
which is that the arrears were not paid.
43.
On the basis of the above I find that
the Applicant has failed to prove that he paid all the amounts that
were overdue and, consequently,
the credit agreement was not
reinstated in terms of
section 129(3)
of the Act.
44.
I mentioned earlier in this judgment
that the Applicant failed to include his erstwhile spouse, Mrs P R,
in this application and
indicated that he had no intention of doing
so, even though the First Respondent took judgment against the
Applicant and Mrs R
jointly and severally.
45.
The absence of Mrs R creates an
insurmountable obstacle for the Applicant. She undoubtedly has
in interest in knowing whether
her judgment debt will be converted
back to a credit agreement debt. At the moment, she may be
forgiven for thinking that
the judgment debt is going to be paid from
the proceeds of the sale of the immovable property. But if I
had found that the
credit agreement was reinstated, then Mrs R would
once again become liable to pay the monthly instalments.
46.
There is also the obvious difficulty
that my judgment will not be binding on Mrs R, who is free at some
time in the future to bring
another rescission application.
47.
The absence of Mrs R from these
proceedings is, in and of itself, a further reason to dismiss the
application.
48.
The credit agreement provides in clause
27.5 that the Applicant agreed to pay the legal costs incurred by the
First Respondent as
a result of the Applicant’s default on the
scale as between attorney and client.
49.
In light of the above I make the
following order:
(i)
The application is dismissed.
(ii)
The Applicant is to pay the costs of the
First Respondent on the scale as between attorney and client.
C
J Mc Aslin
Acting
Judge of the High Court
13
October 2023
On
behalf of the Applicant:
Mr
Mathebula
Instructed
by:
Mathebula
Inc Inc
On
behalf of the Respondent:
Adv.
L Peter
Instructed
by:
Lowndes
Dlamini Inc
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