Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 10South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Moosa and Others (2021/25318) [2022] ZAGPJHC 10 (4 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 August 2021
Headnotes
Summary judgment is granted against the First Defendant, the Second Defendant and the Third Defendant, jointly and severally, the one paying, the other to be absolved, for:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Moosa and Others (2021/25318) [2022] ZAGPJHC 10 (4 January 2022)
ABSA Bank Limited v Moosa and Others (2021/25318) [2022] ZAGPJHC 10 (4 January 2022)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2021/25318
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
YES
/NO
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Applicant
and
MOOSA:
AMINA
First Respondent
(ID
No. [....... ])
# MOOSA: SAYED MOHAMED
MOOSA: SAYED MOHAMED
(ID
No.
[....])
Second Respondent
# PEK INVESTMENTS CC
PEK INVESTMENTS CC
(Reg
no.
1989/039690/23)
Third Respondent
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
MALINDI J:
## Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant for summary judgment claims
R7 327 035.45 in the first claim, and R2 043 024.58 in the second
claim and costs as between
attorney and client.
[2]
Both claims are based on an alleged written
agreement which the Applicant is unable to produce and annexe to the
summons as required
by the Uniform Rules of Court Rule 18(6). The
claims arise out of the said agreement was entered into with the
Principal Debtor,
Pro Roll Corrugated Roofing CC, represented by the
Second Defendant, in which it would operate a current account with
the Applicant.
[3]
The Applicant instead annexes a standard
agreement usually entered into
with
its clients. The Respondents deny having entered into such an
agreement and contend that the Applicant’s summons, and
therefore the application for summary judgment, is defective for
non-compliance with Rule 18(6). The rule requires that when a
claim
is based on a contract, a copy thereof must be annexed to the
summons.
[4]
The claim against the three Defendants is
based on the Deeds of Suretyship signed by the Respondents in terms
of which they bound
themselves in
solidum
as surety and co-principal debtors in
favour of the Plaintiff.
[5]
The second claim arises out of a written
agreement. A copy thereof is
annexed
to the summons and is not disputed in this application.
[6]
In both claims, the Respondents have agreed
that the certificate issued by
any
manager of the Applicant would constitute
prima
facie
proof of their
indebtedness to the Applicant.
## The Merits
The Merits
[7]
The Respondents delivered their Notice of
Intention to oppose summary judgment on 24 August 2021 and the Second
Respondent’s
opposing affidavit only on 4 October 2021 at
16h38. The application was set down on an unopposed basis for 5
October 2021. I allowed
the answering affidavit and stood down the
matter to Thursday, 7 October 2021.
[8]
The Respondents resist summary judgment on
the following grounds:
8.1.
The plaintiff cannot prove the identity of
the Principal debtor;
8.2.
The plaintiff cannot produce a written
agreement that it relies upon; and
8.3.
A dispute of fact has risen which cannot be
resolved on the papers in that the respondents deny that an agreement
was concluded
with the third respondent and the applicant has to
addduce secondary evidence in order to prove the agreement.
Furthermore, that
the applicant has alleged in its particulars of
claim that the principal debtor is Pro ROLL Corrugated Roofing CC.
[9]
The
question is whether despite the absence of an agreement that was
entered into between the parties, a summons may still contain
a cause
of action which can be relied upon in a summary judgment application.
In
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Jenzen, Kevin Glynn; ABSA Bank v Grobbelaar
[1]
,
Sutherland
J held that failure to annex a copy of an agreement relied upon does
not erase a cause of action as a litigant who relies
on the contract
can adduce secondary evidence of its conclusion and terms.
[2]
[10]
Sutherland J stated that "the
Plaintiff should extricate itself from the
regrettable predicament on trial, not by
way of summary judgment.” However, he proceeded to say that the
import or quality
of the allegations made by a defendant to question
the version of the plaintiff about the terms of the agreement alleged
by the
plaintiff must be of such quality as to not be “susceptible
to rebuttal on the papers” or are not “demonstrated
not
to be
bona fide
.”
If it be so then the remedy of summary judgment remains available.
[11]
In this case the Applicant has rebutted the
denial that the Principal Debtor did not enter into an agreement
identical to the standard
agreement as pleaded by the Applicant in
the summons, and therefore demonstrated that the defence is not
bona
fide
. The Principal Debtor is the one
that opened an account on 3 August 2017 with the Applicant and as
represented by the Second Defendant.
Furthermore, the Term Loan
Agreement between the Applicant and Principal Debtor pertains to the
current account
being
operated
between
them.
Lastly,
annexures
"X1"
-
"X13"
represent transactions that took place on
the account. The fact that there is no physical
contract reflecting the identity of the
Principal Debtor is a red herring. The defence of a dispute of fact
also fails on this basis.
It is not a genuine dispute of fact. These
documents show the identity of the principal debtor and the
applicant’s inability
to produce a written agreement is not a
bar to proceeding on summary judgment.
[12]
Binns-Ward
J, post the amendment of Rule 32, in
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd; E and D Security
Systems CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
[3]
elaborated
on what Sutherland J had said in
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Jenzen, Kevin Glynn; ABSA Bank v Grobblelaar
[4]
prior to the amendments to Rule 32 that:
"
14. ...The
starting place must be to recognised that what is critical in legal
proceedings is dictated by the relief sought. In
summary judgment
proceedings, to defeat the plaintiff’s application a defendant
must put up a basis. A plaintiff cannot get
judgment without the
merits of a defence being tested.
"
[13]
Binns-Ward J explains the requirements
under the amended Rule 32 as requiring of the plaintiff to "engaged
with the content
of the plea in order to substantiate its averment
that the defence is not
bona fide
and
has been raised nearly for the purposes of delay. " However, as
it was said in
Jenzen/Grobbelaar
,
summary judgment is available where the pleaded defence can be
rebutted and demonstrated not to be
bona
fide
. I am of the view that these two
judgments are in harmony with each other in setting out the duty and
function of a court considering
summary judgment where the merits of
an action need not be traversed beyond determining whether the
pleaded defence is genuinely
advanced. The rebuttal of the defence as
Sutherland J said must be clear on the papers. Binns-Ward J agrees in
this regard.
[14]
With the Respondents’ defence clearly
negated on paper and therefore disposing
of
any
genuine
dispute
of
fact
and
with
the
Respondents
having
bound
themselves as surety and co-principal debtors in favour of the
Applicant, they are left with no defence to summary judgment.
The
certificates issued by the Applicant constitute
prima
facie
proof of their indebtedness to
the Applicant. The Respondents’ questioning how the overdraft
facility of R1 500 000.00 escalated
to R7 000 000.00 does not amount
to a proper challenge to that certificate.
[15]
In the circumstances, I find in favour of
the Applicant in this application for summary judgment.
## Costs
Costs
[16]
I find no deplorable conduct on the part of
the Respondents in the manner in which they conducted themselves in
these proceedings.
They will bear the costs emanating from the
postponement of the hearing on 5 October 2021 for the belated
delivery of their answering
affidavit when they had entered their
intention to oppose as early as 24 August 2021 and the cost of 7
October 2021 will follow
the result.
## Conclusion
Conclusion
[17]
I therefore make the following order:
Summary judgment is
granted against the First Defendant, the Second Defendant and the
Third Defendant, jointly and severally, the
one paying, the other to
be absolved, for:
# CLAIM A:
CLAIM A:
1.
Payment of the amount of R7,327,035.45;
2.
Interest on the aforesaid amount at the
rate of 10.00% per annum linked and capitalised monthly from 02 May
2021 to date of final
payment, both dates inclusive.
# CLAIM B:
CLAIM B:
#
1.
Payment of the amount of R2,043,024.58;
2.
Interest on the aforesaid amount at the
rate of 7.00% per annum linked and capitalised monthly from 02 May
2021 to date of final
payment, both dates inclusive.
3.
Costs on the party-and-party scale.
# G MALINDI JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
G MALINDI JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
For
the applicants:
J.J
Durandt
Instructed
by:
Jay
Mothobi Incorporated
For
the respondents:
EG
Malherbe
Instructed
by:
AM
Theron Incorporated
Date
of hearing:
5
October 2021
Date
of judgment:
4
January 2022
[1]
Case
No. 2014/877 (GLD).
[2]
At
[5], [10] and [15].
[3]
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC) at [22] and [23].
[4]
At
[14]
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