Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 205South Africa
ABSA Bank Limited v Sable Hills Waterfront Estates CC and Others; ABSA Bank Limited v On Air Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2020/15210;2020/41768) [2022] ZAGPJHC 205; [2022] 2 All SA 767 (GJ) (15 March 2022)
Headnotes
judgment- aim and effect of amendments to rule 32- properly interpreted no disconnect existing between averments made by plaintiff in affidavit supporting summary judgment and averments by defendant opposing summary judgment Required knowledge on behalf of deponent to plaintiff’s affidavit Delivery of defendant’s plea before summary judgment application brought – advantages considered
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## ABSA Bank Limited v Sable Hills Waterfront Estates CC and Others; ABSA Bank Limited v On Air Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2020/15210;2020/41768) [2022] ZAGPJHC 205; [2022] 2 All SA 767 (GJ) (15 March 2022)
ABSA Bank Limited v Sable Hills Waterfront Estates CC and Others; ABSA Bank Limited v On Air Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2020/15210;2020/41768) [2022] ZAGPJHC 205; [2022] 2 All SA 767 (GJ) (15 March 2022)
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sino date 15 March 2022
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
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
REVISED:
YES
15/03/2022
In
the matters between:
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
vs
SABLE
HILLS WATERFRONT ESTATES CC, ANDRIES
VENTER
TRUST N.O., LETITIA VENTER N.O., GRAHAM
BRUCE
PECK
(
Case
number 2020/15210
)
and
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
vs
ON
AIR INVESTMENT HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD,
CHARGE UP
TRADE AND INVEST, FIRST NATIONAL
CORE
(PTY) LTD, SAPPLING TRADE AND INVEST 39
(PTY)
LIMITED
(
Case
number 2020/41768
)
Practice-
Summary judgment- aim and effect of amendments to rule 32- properly
interpreted no disconnect existing between averments
made by
plaintiff in affidavit supporting summary judgment and averments by
defendant opposing summary judgment
Required
knowledge on behalf of deponent to plaintiff’s affidavit
Delivery
of defendant’s plea before summary judgment application brought
– advantages considered
JUDGMENT
GRAVES
AJ
:
[1]
This judgment concerns two summary judgment
applications brought by Absa Bank Limited, as plaintiff. That under
case number 2020/15210
is brought against Sable Hills Waterfront
Estate CC (“
Sable Hills”
)
as principal debtor and against the Andries Venter Trust (“
the
Trust”)
, represented by its
trustees, Mr Andries Jacobus Venter and Ms Letitia Venter, and
against Mr Graham Bruce. The Trust and
Mr Bruce are sued as
sureties for Sable Hills.
[2]
The application under case number 2020/41768 is
brought against On air Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd (“
On
Air”)
as principal debtor and
against the second to fourth defendants as sureties, being Charge Up
Trade and Invest (Pty) Ltd , First
National Call (Pty) Ltd and
Sapling Trade and Invest 39 (Pty) Ltd.
[3]
Before
turning to the merits of the respective summary judgment applications
I wish to say something about the changes introduced
to the summary
judgment procedure in Uniform Rule 32 by GN R842 of
31 May 2019. The new procedure was subjected
to a detailed and
thoughtful analysis by Binns-Ward
J
in
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
.
[1]
Despite having some reservations about the utility and practicality
of the new procedure the learned judge recognised that the
requirement that the summary judgment application should be brought
only after a plea had been delivered. As was noted this is
directed
at achieving, and should succeed in doing, the avoidance of
speculative summary judgment applications.
[2]
That this was one of the animating goals of the Task Team constituted
by the Rules Board to consider amendments to the summary
judgment
procedure, is unmistakable. One reason articulated by the Task Team
for the present summary judgment procedure being regard
as
unsatisfactory is that deserving plaintiffs were frequently unable to
obtain expeditious relief because of an inability to expose
bogus
defences. This is primarily because of the inability of the plaintiff
under the previous rule to discern the defence that
the defendant may
advance, coupled with the prohibition against any further affidavits
by the plaintiff.
[3]
Many
of the criticisms and observations regarding the new procedure noted
in
Tumileng
may in
time prove to be prescient and may result in further changes to the
rule concerning important procedural remedy. The analysis
by the
learned judge will undoubtably serve as the cornerstone for further
judicial analysis.
[4]
I do
not intend traversing each of the observations and findings in the
Tumileng
judgment,
but I wish to make a few of my own observations. First, the prefatory
remark in the judgment that the summary judgment
procedure has long
worked successfully is not a view universally held.
[4]
Criticism of the summary judgment process was voiced by the late
Appeal Justice O. Galgut
in
his Report of the Commission of Enquiry into Civil Proceedings in the
Supreme Court of South Africa (1980), which in dealing
with summary
judgment said:
“
It
is generally agreed that the present procedure has little value. A
defendant can put up a fictitious defence and the plaintiff
cannot
answer it.”
[5]
[5]
The Report considered two possible solutions: the
first was that the plaintiff should be given the right to reply on
affidavit.
The second was that the plaintiff should file a
declaration and be given the right to apply for summary judgment by
filing a verifying
affidavit, that the defendant file its plea and
support the allegations on oath and that the plaintiff be given the
opportunity
to replicate on oath. Justice Galgut
favoured
the latter procedure. What was ultimately recommended by the Task
Team regarding the amended procedure is set out in paragraph
8 of the
Memorandum reproduced in the
Tumileng
judgment. The first significant change was the
recommendation that the defendant should deliver its plea before
summary judgment
could be applied for. Further, it was recommended
that the plaintiff should deliver an affidavit that went beyond the
mere formalism
which was required under the previous rule.
[6]
The
pitfalls of the previous procedural requirements concerning the
plaintiff’s affidavit are illuminated by an earlier, unreported
judgment of Binns-Ward
J
in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Future Indefinite Investments 201 (Pty) Ltd
.
[6]
Here the serious deficits in the affidavit deposed by a manager of
the plaintiff bank who plainly did not demonstrate any personal
knowledge of the relevant facts, are illustrated. This made it
impossible for the presiding judge to place any reliance on the
affidavit. I suggest that the legitimate criticisms levelled at the
plaintiff’s affidavit supporting summary judgment in
Future
Indefinite Investments
were
not only a result of sloppy and slapdash drafting but also a
consequence, albeit unintended, of the formulation of the previous
subrule 32(2). The previous subrule required the plaintiff’s
affidavit to be by a person who could swear positively
to the facts
and which affidavit was required to verify the cause of action and
the amount, if any claimed. Despite extensive judicial
pronouncements
giving guidance on pitfalls to be avoided
[7]
plaintiffs (particularly corporate litigants) continued to submit
deficient affidavits. This was one of the areas identified by
the
Task Team as requiring an amendment to the rule. The elucidation of
the requirements of the plaintiff’s affidavit as
set out in
paragraphs [20] and [21] of the
Tumileng
judgment
provides valuable guidance to plaintiffs wishing to invoke this
procedure and I respectfully agree with what is there stated.
[7]
Second,
I agree that the amended rule now requires a plaintiff to consider
very carefully whether it is justified in applying for
summary
judgment, because it is now required to engage more closely the
contents of the plea.
[8]
But I am not convinced that this will be futile in most cases. A
procedural oddity under the previous rule was that the summary
judgment application accompanied by the affidavit by the plaintiff,
was delivered after appearance to defend was delivered but
before any
vestige of a defence was disclosed. This notwithstanding the
plaintiff was required to allege in its affidavit that
“
in
his opinion there is no bona fide defence to the action and that
notice of intention to defend has been delivered solely for
the
purpose of delay
.”
The constitutionality of placing this burden on the defendant before
it had an opportunity to advance a defence must now
be regarded as
questionable and would probably have attracted a challenge at some
stage.
[9]
The new rule
which requires the plaintiff inter alia to explain briefly why the
defences pleaded does not raise any issue for trial
arguably seeks to
avoid the above fallacy in the old rule as well as well as avoiding
the potential disconnect between subrules
32(2)(b) and 32(3)(b)
referred to in
Tumileng
at
para [40].
[10]
The
English courts take into account whether the plaintiff has a
‘realistic’ as opposed to a ‘fanciful’
prospect of success. A realistic prospect is one that carries some
degree of conviction and means a claim that is more than merely
arguable.
[11]
I believe
that this approach commends itself to the South African procedure.
[8]
The further comments on the opposing affidavit in
paragraphs [24] and [25] of
Tumileng
provide useful insight into the new procedure; the
method of evaluating the defence raised on the same basis as before
remains the
same. Whether this will indeed result in (an increased)
proliferation of argumentative matter in the opposing affidavit
remains
to be seen; argumentative matter was not notably absent under
the previous procedure.
[9]
Ultimately, whilst the amendments to
Uniform Rule 32 seek to ameliorate some of the shortcomings
in the summary judgment
process this is likely to be achieved only in
part. Procedural rules can seldom prevent all misuses or abuses; all
that can be
hoped for is that a procedural structure is provided
which clearly articulates the requirements for the remedy and that
compliance
is enforced by our Courts. Courts will inevitably continue
to be troubled with affidavits that are non-compliant with the Rules
or poorly drafted, or both:
“
The
best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are
full of passionate intensity.”
[12]
[10]
Finally,
the caution expressed in paragraphs [12] and [13] of the
Tumileng
judgment
about excessive reliance on jurisdictions such as England and
Australia is merited. The procedures in these jurisdictions
contain
features which do not fit comfortably within our own summary judgment
procedure as historically developed.
[13]
But I suggest that there is value to be found in these jurisdictions
provided the differences are recognised. The overall object
of
summary judgment to “
winnow
out cases that are not fit for trial”
[14]
is unmistakably applicable in the South African context.
Case No 2020/15210
[11]
By summons issued on 1 July 2020 Absa
instituted action against the named defendants in their respective
capacities. The claims
against the defendants arose out of diverse
loan agreements and other instruments, which are summarised below:
[11.1]
A term loan agreement (claim A, account no.
[....]) concluded between the plaintiff and Sable Hills on 28 April
2020 for a loan
to the first defendant in the sum of R7 million.
The terms of payment provided for interest linked to the prime
lending rate
and the requirement that repayment be made in 119 equal
monthly instalments of R89 981,65 commencing on 1 May 2010
and
a final instalment of R89 981,99 on 1 April 2020.
[11.2]
An access term loan facility agreement
(claim B, account no. [....]) concluded on 15 January 2013
between the plaintiff and
Sable Hills for a term loan facility in the
aggregate minimum amount of R8 million. Interest accrued at the
plaintiff’s
prime rate, compounded monthly with unpaid amounts
attracting interest at the prime rate plus 6% per
annum
.
The first defendant was required to repay the facility in equal
monthly instalments with the final payment on the 5
th
anniversary of the date of signature, being
17 January 2018.
[11.3]
An overdraft facility (claim C, account no.
[....]), in terms of which the plaintiff provided an overdraft
banking facility to Sable
Hills in the sum of R7 600 000,00,
attracting interest at the plaintiff’s prime overdraft rate
from time to time.
The overdraft facility was repayable on demand by
the plaintiff.
[12]
The Trust and the fifth defendant (“
Mr
Peck
”
) executed deeds of
suretyship binding themselves
in solidum
as sureties and co-principal debtors in favour of
the plaintiff for due payment by Sable Hills of all moneys due which
they executed
respectively on 17 January 2003 and 24 January
2006. The suretyships contained the standard clauses including those
renouncing
benefits.
[13]
On 27 November 2007 Sable Hills caused a
covering mortgage bond B19201/2007 to be registered in favour of the
plaintiff for
the sum of R32 300 000,00 (plus an additional
R6 460 000,00) over two immovable properties being Erven
292
and 293 Sable Hills, Waterfront Estate Township, Registration
Division JR, Gauteng. The properties were mortgaged as security for
the due and prompt payment of the capital amount, interest and the
additional amount (or portion thereof) arising from any cause
which
may be owing or payable at any time to the plaintiff.
[14]
On 24 August 2018 the Trust caused mortgage
bond B32542/2018 to be registered over Portion 112 of the
Farm Tweefontein
413, Registration Division JR, Gauteng for the
sum of R25 million, or any lesser amount that may become owing
by the Trust
to the plaintiff under the Mortgage Loan Agreement
concluded. The bond was to remain as continuing covering security for
each and
every sum in respect of which the Trust may become indebted.
This security features prominently in the defendants’
opposition
to summary judgment.
[15]
The plaintiff alleged in its Particulars of claim
that Sable Hills had defaulted on each of the loans set out in claims
A and B
and that it had failed to make regular and sufficient
deposits in respect of the overdraft facility in claim C. In all
respects,
the plaintiff claimed a breach of the respective conditions
by the first defendant. The plaintiff further alleged that Sable
Hills
had failed to honour the terms of the loan agreements in claims
A and B and the overdraft facility in claim C. Consequently
the
plaintiff claimed payment of the outstanding amounts of R4 823 761,55
(claim A), R3 954 065,67 (claim B)
and
R11 575 176,53 (claim C). It further claimed an order
declaring executable (with regard to Sable Hills) Erven 292
and
293, Sable Hills, Waterfront Estate Township and (with regard to the
Trust) such an order in respect of the remaining extent
of
Portion 112 of the Farm Tweefontein 413. In addition, the
plaintiff claimed interest and costs in accordance with the various
instruments.
[16]
In their plea the defendants admitted failure to
pay in respect of claims A, B and C and admitted the outstanding
balances as set
out in the certificates of balance attached to the
particulars. But they pleaded diverse reasons for maintaining that
judgment
as prayed should not be granted which are dealt with fully
below. The defendants additionally raised two
in
limine
defences: first, that the
summary judgment application was jurisdictionally defective; and
second, that the plaintiff already had
sufficient security as
contemplated in Uniform Rule 32(3)(a) which warranted the
defendants being afforded the opportunity
to enter into the merits of
the matter at trial. I deal first with these
in
limine
points.
[17]
The
defendants’ argument on jurisdiction is that the amendment to
Subrules 32(2) and (3) with effect from 31 May 2019
[15]
does not permit the plaintiff to embark on “
the
trial of a cause on paper”
,
or to use the procedure to gain a tactical advantage in the trial or
to abuse the procedure by forcing the defendants to provide
a preview
of its evidence and to limit its defences in any way. Developing this
argument the defendants maintained that the plaintiff
was restricted
to the facts pleaded in its Particulars of claim and was not
permitted through its affidavit to provide a narrative
of further
facta
probanda
or
facta
probantia
.
[18]
I do not find it necessary in the present
circumstances to delineate the precise ambit of what is permissible
in this portion of
Rule 32(2)(b) which requires the plaintiff in
its affidavit to identify “
the
facts upon which the plaintiff’s claim is based and to explain
briefly why the defence, as pleaded, does not raise any
issue for
trial”
. I accept that the
plaintiff should, by and large be restricted to the facts as set out
in its particulars of claim. But there
may well be circumstances in
which a factual matter raised in the particulars of claim and pleaded
to in the plea may permissibly
be clarified or elucidated without
advancing a new factual premise for the claim or seeking to introduce
substantial, supplementary
facts. The test in this regard will depend
on the particular facts and will no doubt be developed over time. I
am satisfied that
in the instant plaintiff’s affidavit did not
exceed the permissible bounds.
[19]
The
contentions regarding the prohibition against a plaintiff gaining a
tactical advantage are formulaic when stated in such general
terms
and lack factual foundation. The new summary judgment procedure is
implicitly aimed at exposing a defendant’s pleaded
defence to
the scrutiny of the plaintiff and the court; no procedural unfairness
arises from this. The
dictum
of the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Joob
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
[16]
concerning the pre-2019 procedure remains apposite:
“
The
rationale for summary judgment proceedings is impeccable. The
procedure is not intended to deprive a defendant with a triable
issue
or a sustainable defence of her/his day in court.”
[17]
As I have canvassed above
the requirements regarding the affidavits by the plaintiff and the
defendant/s respectively have been
reformulated in the amended rule.
There is no indication that the Rules Board intended to convert the
process into an opposed motion.
This point
in limine
cannot be
upheld.
[20]
The second point
in
limine
suggests that security is
already in place sufficient for the purposes of Subrule 32(3)(a).
For this contention the defendants
say in their opposing affidavit
that the plaintiff holds sufficient security under the two mortgage
bonds executed in its favour
of the sums of R32 300 000,00
(mortgage bond 192017/2007) and for the further sum of R25 000 000,00
(mortgage
bond 32542/2018). The amounts outstanding as at the date of
issue of summons under claims A, B and C appear in aggregate to be
less than the aggregate amounts of the sums secured by the two
mortgage bonds. Nevertheless I do not accept that such security as
may notionally be afforded by these properties constitutes the giving
of security to the plaintiff to the satisfaction of the Court
for any
judgment including costs as contemplated in subrule 3(a). To
accept this contention would require that a court enter
an assessment
or evaluation of the amount of free equity that may be available to a
creditor in an immovable property or properties.
This would
require the deployment of skills in property evaluation which few
judges would possess, or would be inclined to deploy.
What is
contemplated by subrule 3(a) is plainly security which is easily
quantifiable, liquid and which permits prompt satisfaction
of any
judgment. Neither of these features are apparent from what is
proposed as security. This point
in
limine
is unsustainable.
[21]
I now
turn to the merits of the summary judgment application. Following the
institution of action by the plaintiff the defendants
delivered their
plea as contemplated by rule 32(1)
[18]
making the admissions referred to above. However, they pleaded that
it would be contrary to public policy to enforce the recovery
of the
loans under claims A, B and C prior to the expiry of a period of
twelve months, and further disputed that entitlement of
the plaintiff
to orders declaring the properties executable.
[22]
The
essential features of the plea are these:
[19]
[22.1]
Mr Venter is a longstanding property
developer who has over some years (through various legal entities)
embarked upon successful
property developments. The plaintiff has
habitually been his banker and has provided loan or other financing,
which obligations
have been honoured to the mutual benefit of both
parties.
[22.2]
Prior to 2007 the opportunity to develop
the Sable Hills Waterfront Estate development (“
the
development”
) presented itself.
Mr Venter says that he partnered with the plaintiff who would
provide finance for the development. To secure
the loan funding
business plans were submitted and vetted (which I take to mean
approved) by the plaintiff.
[22.3]
The
initial development indebtedness incurred by Mr Venter was for
R3,2 million together with an additional sum required for
the costs
of building houses and installing services for the development.
[20]
A corresponding bond was registered over Erven 292 and 293,
Sable Hills Waterfront Estate Township. This is the mortgage bond
B192017/2007 which was registered on 27 November 2007 and is
referenced in the particulars of claim.
[22.4]
Clause 15.2 of the mortgage bond
contains the following condition:
“
Subject
to the conditions therein contained and further subject
to
conditions imposed in favour of sable hills homeowners association
(registration
nr: 2003/015759/08) (Association incorporated under Section 21
of Act 61 of 1973) and more especially subject
to the conditions
imposed by the
sable
hills waterfront estate homeowners association.”
The
defendants allege in their plea that the conditions included the
right to have a
usufruct
registered
in favour of the Association for an indefinite period over Erven 283,
285, 286, 291, 292, 293 and 295 of Sable Hills
Waterfront Estate
Township.
[21]
[22.5]
To
secure the registration of the
usufruct
the
consent of the plaintiff as bondholder was required in terms of
Section 65(3) of the Deeds Registry’s Act, 47 of
1937.
[22]
[22.6]
By 2010 the indebtedness for the
development had been reduced through the sale of properties and this
indebtedness together with
further funding requirements were
restructured through the loan set out in claim A.
[22.7]
However,
from 2010 and on an on-going basis the Association engaged Sable
Hills in what was termed by the defendants as “
a
legal war of attrition”
to
secure rights for members which the defendants say they are not
entitled to. This included various legal objections to rezoning
applications and the attempt to have the
usufruct
registered.
[23]
The plaintiff, however, declined to furnish its consent to
registration of the personal servitude in the form of the
usufruct
.
[24]
[22.8]
During
2013 the access facility and overdraft facility were concluded
(claims B and C respectively). As security for these
further
loans Sable Hills registered first covering mortgage bonds over units
52, 61, 62 and 77 of Erf 741, Sable Hills Waterfront
Estate
together with a limited suretyship of R8 million.
[25]
[22.9]
After a long period of refusal the
plaintiff eventually on 23 February 2018 agreed to permit
cancellation of the bonds over
Erven 292 and 293 (this
apparently necessary to permit the registration of the
usufruct
)
on the condition that a replacement bond would be registered by the
Trust in favour of the plaintiff in the sum of R25 million
over
the remaining extent of Portion 112 of the Farm Tweefontein.
The terms of the consent were contained in a letter
from the
plaintiff dated 22 February 2018 addressed to the members of
Sable Hills and marked for the attention of Mr Venter.
The
letter was signed by Neville van Vuuren, whose designation is
rendered as “Wealth Banker, ABSA Wealth, Sandton”.
I
quote the body of the letter below:
“
Release
of security: Erven 292 and 293 Sable Hills Waterfront Estate Township
mortgage bond B192017/2017
We hereby confirm that
we have received credit approval to release erven 292 and 293
Sable Hills Waterfront Estate Township and replace this with
registering a first continuous covering mortgage bond for R25 million
ifo Absa Wealth over the remaining Extent of Portion
112 of the
Farm Tweefontein 413 JR.
The above release of
security will only take place once all our securities have been
perfected in accordance with our credit approval
as well as all our
internal terms and conditions associated with this transaction.
Please
do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions regarding
this letter.”
[26]
[emphasis added]
I will refer to this as
“the substitution letter”.
[22.10]
On 15 March 2018 a written instruction
was given by the plaintiff to its attorneys Boshoff Inc to attend to
registration of
a bond on the standard conditions for the amount of
R25 million over the Farm Tweefontein 413.
[22.11]
On 15 March 2018 attorneys Carol
Coetzee & Associates Inc. wrote to Boshoff Attorneys with the
heading “
Our bond cancellation:
Sable Hills Waterfront Estates CC / Absa Property: Erven 292 and 293
Sable Hills
”
. The letter confirms
the instructions received from the plaintiff to attend to the
cancellation of the bonds and goes on to deal
with necessary
documents and various matters pertaining to the cancellation, which
are not relevant.
[22.12]
The next document annexed to the opposing
affidavit is an email from ABSA dated 31 July 2018 to Boshoff
Inc (and copied to
attorneys Carol Coetzee) the body of which reads
as follows:
“
Dear
Hester
I
have spoken to Dries and
we
agreed that we will cancel our bonds at a later stage
but we need to lodge the Farm bond
documentation immediately. Please proceed.”
[emphasis
added]
The
email is in the name of Mr Neville van Vuuren, Wealth Banker and
it appears that the reference to “
Dries”
is to
Mr Andries Venter.
[27]
[22.13]
The plea explicitly references the
plaintiff’s consent to the release of Erven 292 and 293
and replacement with the bond
over the Tweefontein property. It
goes on to allege that the replacement bond over the Tweefontein
property was registered
on 24 August 2018, but that despite
numerous requests the plaintiff failed to procure the cancellation of
the bond over Erven 292
and 293. It is said that on 1 April
2020 the plaintiff advised that it did not consent to the
cancellation. The details of
this appear from an email bearing this
date from the plaintiff’s attorneys of record in this
litigation to Carol Coetzee
Attorneys. The material portion says
this:
“
Our
client does not consent to the cancellation of the mortgage bonds
registered in its favour over Erven 292 and 293, Sable Hills
Waterfront Estate for as long as there is any indebtedness owing to
our client by Sable Hills Waterfront Estate CC.
Any previous consents
to cancellation were revoked, alternatively is hereby repealed.
Kindly urgently
arrange for delivery of the original title deeds and mortgage bonds
to our offices. …”
[22.14]
The
plea goes on to set out a rambling narrative of events concerning the
development including references to the deleterious effect
of
Covid-19 which had arrested the progress of the development and
prevented the repayment of the loans. The defendants plead that
the
repayment in full will be made within a period of 12 months after the
date of the plea and maintains that the plaintiff has
sufficient
security in immovable property, being the bond for R32 300 000,00
over Erven 292 and 293 and for R25 000 000,00
over the
Tweefontein property.
[28]
[23]
The plaintiff’s affidavit in support of
summary judgment was signed by a manageress in the business banking
and wealth recoveries
division of the plaintiff who claims to have
personal knowledge by virtue of her position as manageress, having
familiarised herself
with the file, documents and records relating to
the indebtedness and to security. This is followed by a paragraph in
these terms:
“
4.
To the extent necessary and in respect of that which I have not been
personally involved within this
matter, I submit that I have
nonetheless familiarised myself with all facts and I can therefore
solemnly state that I am undoubtably
the appropriate person to give
evidence in these proceedings.”
[24]
The unreported judgment in
Future
Indefinite Investments
that I have
referred to above was justifiably critical of the affidavit of the
plaintiff’s deponent in that matter. This judgment
was given in
2016 and appears prominently in Erasmus: Superior Court Practice
which is one of the leading texts on the High Court
Rules. While the
deponent to the plaintiff’s affidavit may not be expected to
study judgments or legal texts her affidavit
would have been greatly
improved by receiving guidance from the plaintiff’s attorneys
on a number of features, including
these:
[24.1]
the introductory qualifying words, “
[t]o
the extent necessary and in respect of that which I have not been
personally involved …”
are
practically meaningless. It is clear from the affidavit that the
deponent has no personal knowledge of the facts
other
than
as gleaned from the file of
documents and records. It is therefore wholly inaccurate to suggest
any personal involvement in the
“
matter”
when the sole involvement has been through perusal
of the file documents and records;
[24.2]
the statement by the deponent that she is
the appropriate person to give evidence is similarly inaccurate and
in my view, misleading.
The appropriate person would have been
Mr Neville van Vuuren who appears to have had the benefit of at
least some individual
engagements with Mr Venter. Whether Mr van
Vuuren was available to provide affidavit evidence is not disclosed;
[24.3]
the sole reason that can be discerned for
the selection of the deponent lies in the reference to her employment
in the wealth recoveries
division of the plaintiff. In common
parlance she deals with bad debts. But this position cannot serve as
a universal qualification
to depose to an affidavit in support of
summary judgment.
[25]
The situation is not improved when the plaintiff’s
deponent deals with the main point in contention in the summary
judgment
application relating to the release of the security over
Erven 292 and 293. The deponent concedes that the plaintiff had
agreed
to this release but says that this was contingent upon the
fulfilment of “
various
preconditions which the defendants failed to fulfil”
,
including the registration of a replacement bond over the Tweefontein
property for R44,5 million and the reduction of the overdraft
account
from R8 million to R6,05 million. I deal with this further
below.
[26]
I
accept that a bank such as the plaintiff seeks to introduce some
efficiency into its recovery process, including that part of
the
process involving court processes to enforce debts. Our courts have
recognised that financial institutions, including banks,
face
practical challenges in deposing to affidavits in support of summary
judgment which demonstrate the ability to swear positively
to the
facts as required by subrule 2(a).
[29]
What has long been required is personal knowledge, which may not
equate to knowledge necessarily based on actual personal involvement
or first-hand experience in the underlying transactions. What may be
sufficient, depending on the circumstances would be knowledge
derived
from reference to records which are reliable and accurate.
[30]
More on this below.
[27]
The defendants’ opposing affidavit is brief
by comparison to its lengthy plea and its main purpose seems to be to
attach the
various documents referred to in the plea that were not
annexed to that pleading. It adds nothing material to the defence.
[28]
As noted above the indebtedness of Sable Hills and
the defaults on the loan agreements and overdraft facility is not
disputed by
the defendants. Although not unsympathetic I am
unpersuaded that a proper case has been made out by the defendants
that the lockdowns
occasioned by the Covid-19 pandemic serve as a
legal justification for a delay in payment. Nor am I persuaded that
the plaintiff
was for this reason precluded from instituting action
for recovery of the indebtedness. An indulgence of the nature sought
by the
defendants lacks legal foundation.
[29]
This
means that the fate of the summary judgment application depends upon
whether the contentions regarding the release and substitution
of
immovable properties are sufficient to constitute a
bona
fide
defence
to the action.
[31]
I
deal with this together with the contention that the enforcement by
the plaintiff of the terms of the various loan instruments
and the
execution against Erven 292 and 293 would be contrary to public
policy. I should point out that the plea filed on
behalf of the
defendants restricted this argument on public policy to a prohibition
against enforcement and recovery of the loans
under claims B and
C, said to be contrary to public policy if it occurred prior to the
expiry of 12 months. It was said that
as the prayer seeking orders
for the various immovable properties to be declared executable were
contingent upon the valid enforceability
of claims A, B and C, this
should similarly not be permitted. I accept the second proposition as
logically correct if it can be
shown that there is a bona fide
defence to the monetary claims.
[30]
In the affidavit resisting summary judgment the
defendants in confirming the allegations in the plea appear to
broaden the basis
of their contention to something more general, to
the effect that the plaintiff should not be permitted to profit from
its own
wrong and that it would be contrary to public policy to
permit the plaintiff to take judgment. Despite a suspicion that the
defendants
were trimming their sales to the wind I accept that the
affidavit should in the instant case stand as the basis for the
determination
of whether a bona fide defence as required has been
established. The purpose of the delivery of the plea before the
application
for summary judgment is to alert the plaintiff as to the
substantive nature of the defence that will be proffered by the
defendant/s
with the aim of encouraging the plaintiff to make an
informed decision as to whether to apply for summary judgment, rather
than
to do this ritually. Save in extreme circumstances I do not
believe that a forensic comparison between the plea and the opposing
affidavit is required. During argument on the import and effect of
the substitution letter the debate segued into whether the
substitution letter constituted a parallel agreement with some
independent contractual force. At my invitation, both counsel filed
brief supplementary submissions for which I am grateful.
[31]
The plaintiff made two supplementary submissions.
First, reference was made to clause 11.3 of the mortgage loan
agreement, in the
following terms:
“
11.3
Variation
of terms
11.3.1
No contract varying, adding to, deleting from or cancelling of
(sic)
the facility document will be effective unless reduced to writing and
signed by or on behalf of the bank and the borrower
.
11.3.2
The expiry or termination of a facility document will not prejudice
the rights of the bank in respect of any antecedent breach by the
borrower of, or non-performance under, that facility document.”
[Emphasis provided by the
plaintiff.]
I do not believe that the
substitution letter varied, added to or deleted from the mortgage
loan agreement. But did it cancel that
document or constitute the
termination thereof? To my mind the answer must be “No”.
The letter does not purport to
alter or vary the indebtedness of the
defendants; what it states is that the plaintiff agrees to the
release of the security enjoyed
over Erven 292 and 293 and to
substitution therefor by the Tweefontein Property. I do not find any
express reference in the
mortgage bond agreement to Erven 292 or
293 or to any other immovable property. Consequently, clause 11.3
does not in terms
preclude substitution of security.
[32]
The second contention by the plaintiff,
essentially repeating what was stated in the main submissions was
that if the substitution
letter is to be construed as a separate
agreement then the defendants had not demonstrated
prima
facie
that they had fulfilled the
suspensive conditions contained in that letter. This contention
should be read with what is said by
the plaintiff in its affidavit in
support of summary judgment:
“
19.
Whilst it is true that the Plaintiff agreed to release bonds over
Erven 292 and 293, such was contingent upon the
fulfilment of various
preconditions which the Defendants failed to fulfil, such as:
19.1 the
registration of a replacement bond over Portion 112 of the Farm
Tweefontein for R44,5 million;
19.2 the
reduction of the overdraft account mentioned above from R8 million to
R6,05 million.”
The
difficulty with this proposition is that there is no evidence before
me that there were preconditions imposed by the plaintiff
relating to
the bond over Tweefontein being for R44,5 million, or to a reduction
in the overdraft amount; these are certainly not
to be found in the
substitution letter. During argument I asked counsel for the
plaintiff where I would find the internal terms
and conditions
referred to in the substitution letter but he was unable to direct me
to any document containing these. I further
regard the reference in
the letter to the need for all securities to have been perfected to
be insufficiently certain for me to
find that the specific
preconditions relied on by the plaintiff were indeed in force. On my
reading this reference to securities
being perfected is compatible
with the replacement of the existing securities (Erven 292 and
293) with the Tweefontein Farm
property. Of course, I cannot
determine this with a sufficient degree of certainty to make
conclusive determination on these issues
nor need I determine whether
or not there is a balance of probabilities in favour of the plaintiff
or the defendants.
[32]
For present purposes I do not find it necessary to decide the exact
legal nature of the substitution letter. If it is to constitute
an
agreement then would the absence of the defendants signature (as
contemplated by clause 11.3.1 of the mortgage bond agreement)
preclude reliance on this? And if not, would enforcement of the terms
of this agreement, separate from or together with the other
loan
agreements, be unfair, unreasonable or unduly harsh and consequently
contrary to public policy?
[33]
These are matters that can only be determined in a trial.
[33]
I also have considerable difficulty with the email
of 1 April 2020 from the plaintiff’s present attorneys of
record to
the conveyancing attorneys dealing with the cancellation of
the bonds over Erven 292 and 293. It will be recalled that the
bond over the Tweefontein property was registered on
24 August
2018
.
Prima
facie
this bond was intended to replace
the previous security. Why then some 18 months later in
April
2020
did the attorneys advise that the
plaintiff declined to consent to the cancellation for as long as
there was any indebtedness owed
by Sable Hills? If this was a
condition of the substitution then it is not so recorded. Similarly
puzzling is the suggestion that
previous consents to cancellation are
revoked or repealed. If so what then about the performance rendered
by the defendants in
causing the bond over the Tweefontein property
to be registered; are they not entitled to counter-performance? If
not, are they
entitled to demand cancellation of this bond? These are
also matters that cannot be answered in the present summary judgment
proceedings.
[34]
The
defendants themselves are uncertain about the exact nature of their
legal right underpinning their opposition to the application
for
summary judgment. Their rendition of the nature and grounds of their
defence and the material facts relied upon is not a picture
of
clarity, but I am not satisfied that the plaintiff’s case is
unimpeachable and that the defendants’ defence is bogus
or bad
in law.
[34]
I believe
that the monetary claim is sufficient intertwined with the prayer for
execution against immovable property to find that
all disputed issues
should be resolved at a trial. I cannot accept the plaintiff’s
contention that the pleaded defence does
not raise any issue for
trial.
[35]
The nature of the defence raised in the plea
concerning the substitution letter in my view required the
plaintiff’s deponent
to engage issuably with the defence
through a representative of the plaintiff with personal knowledge of
the facts relating to
the substitution. The email from Mr van
Vuuren to the bond attorneys on 31 July 2018 which refers to a
conversation with
“
Dries”
probably refers to a conversation with Mr Andries
Venter, which could conceivably bear upon the
bona
fides
of the defence. The email
directly engages the question of release of security recorded in the
security letter written by Mr van
Vuuren. I fail to see how the
plaintiff’s deponent who suggests no knowledge of this
interaction or of the substitution beyond
the correspondence, is able
to state on oath that this defence is not bona fide. I am of the view
that the defendants have disclosed
a
bona
fide
defence to the action and the
plaintiff is not entitled to summary judgment.
Case no. 2020/41768
[36]
The plaintiff’s action against the
defendants is for payment of R6 273 714.24, interest and
costs. The claim is
based upon the following:
[36.1]
a written loan agreement between the
plaintiff and On Air concluded on 21 September 2011 for a cash
loan facility up to R40 625 000,00.
The loan was to be
prepaid in 120 equal monthly instalments commencing on the first
month following the month on which the first
drawdown was made, and
would bear interest at a fixed rate for an initial period of 24
months and thereafter equal to the plaintiff’s
prime rate of
interest. It was a condition of the loan that further security as set
out below would be provided.
[36.2]
On Air was required to register a
continuing covering mortgage bond over an office block situated in
Woodmead Ext. 22
(“the property”) for the total
loan amount plus an additional amount. The mortgage bond was
registered on 30 September
2011 with number B44291/2011.
[36.3]
the second to fourth defendants, being
limited liability companies were required to bind themselves as
securities for and co-principal
debtors with On Air for the maximum
amount of R13 540 000,00 together with interest and costs.
All three deeds of suretyship
are in identical terms and contain
terms of the nature usually found in such documents. The suretyships
were executed by the second,
third and fourth defendants on
26 August, 17 August and 12 August 2011, respectively.
[37]
On 6 August 2019 On Air sold the
property for an amount of R31 004 000,00. After
registration of the transfer
on 13 July 2020 an amount of
R25 952 370,00 was paid to the plaintiff. The plaintiff
alleges that on 22 October
2020 On Air was indebted to it
in the amount of R6 273 714,24, plus interest on this sum
at the prime rate of interest,
7%
per annum
,
calculated and capitalised monthly from 23 October 2020 to date
of payment. A certificate of balance, signed by a manager
of the
plaintiff was attached to the particulars of claim confirming the
indebtedness and amounts payable, which were unpaid. The
plaintiff
pleads that the loan agreement is not subject to the provisions of
the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
and that, consequently the
suretyships are similarly excluded. Judgment is prayed for against
the first, second, third and fourth
defendants, jointly and
severally, for the amount of R6 273 714,24, interest and
attorney-client cost, as provided for
in the various instruments.
[38]
The plea delivered on behalf of the defendants
does not dispute the conclusion or validity of the various debt and
security instruments
concluded or that of the mortgage bond, nor do
they take issue with the terms thereof. Their pleaded defence is that
on 31 July
2020 the plaintiff (represented by various
individuals, including a Mr Wikus de Jager) and the defendants
(represented by
Mr Henning du Plessis) settled the dispute,
being the outstanding amount claimed. In support of this settlement
they attach
an email from Mr du Plessis to Mr de Jager on
31 July 2020 which they contend confirms the settlement reached.
I
deal with this further below.
[39]
The plaintiff duly applied for summary judgment
and delivered an affidavit by a manageress of the plaintiff whose
authority is illustrated
through a certificate of authority. The
affidavit contains the same wording as that referred to above under
case no. 15210/2020.
The curious lack of particularity in this
affidavit regarding what division or area of the plaintiff the
deponent is employed in
is, however, not fatal. The deponent says in
her affidavit that she has spoken to Mr Lodewikus Tobias de
Jager who informed
her that he did not at any stage agree to write
off any portion of the debt and that the sale of the property was
permitted so
as to reduce the indebtedness. A confirmatory affidavit
by the said Mr de Jager confirming what is said in the main
affidavit
is attached. I am satisfied that the deponent to the
confirmatory affidavit is the individual referred to in the above
email correspondence.
[40]
The main deponent to the affidavit supporting
summary judgment refers to paragraph 24 of the Loan Agreement which
is in these terms:
“
24.
Variation and waiver
No agreement varying
or deleting any provision of the loan agreement or adding any
provision, and no waiver of any rights, will
be effective unless in
writing and signed by the borrower and the bank.”
Also of relevance is
clause 27:
“
27.
No indulgence allowed by the bank will operate as a waiver or
abandonment by the bank of its rights, or preclude
the bank from
exercising any of its rights, whether under the mortgage bond or the
borrower’s indebtedness to the bank.”
[41]
The
defendants delivered an extremely brief opposing affidavit in which
they first asked for condonation for the late filing of
their
opposing affidavit. This was not opposed and was granted. The
affidavit was along the same lines as set out in the plea,
alleging
that on 31 July 2020 the plaintiff and the defendants settled
the balance outstanding through a compromise by which
the plaintiff
agreed to write off the outstanding balance of R6 273 714,24
being the balance owing after sale of the
immovable property and part
payment to the plaintiff. The legal principles of compromise were
extensively considered and analysed
in the Full Bench judgment in
Be Bop
A Lula Manufacturing and Printing CC v Kingtex Marketing (Pty)
Ltd
.
[35]
A compromise (
transactio
)
is an agreement in terms of which the parties to an obligation settle
a dispute arising from such obligation. Once consensus has
been
reached on the settlement of the dispute the original obligation is
discharged and a new obligation, based on the terms of
the settlement
comes into existence. The effect of a compromise is to put an end to
the prior claim which may be disputed and uncertain,
in the same way
as if the matter were finally adjudicated on. Compromises are to be
strictly interpreted because they exclude everything
which was
probably not contemplated by the parties at the time they reached the
compromise. The party alleging a compromise bears
the
onus
of
proving it. In determining whether or not a compromise has been
effected, the Court will have regard to the substance rather
than the
form in which it is couched or the description given to it by the
parties.
[36]
[42]
Have the defendants established the compromise on
a sufficient basis to avoid summary judgment? I believe not. My view
is based
largely on further emails annexed to the opposing affidavit
which assist in an evaluation of the compromise:
[42.1]
on
the morning of 9 March 2020 Mr du Plessis
(representing the defendants) sent an email to Mr Wikus de Jager
in which he asked for definitive direction regarding a potential
transaction with a purchaser.
[37]
Mr Henning records that the deal had been discussed between “
all
parties on several occasions”
and
further advises that the deal requires the plaintiff to pay agent’s
commission because the purchaser has paid all other
costs;
[42.2]
later on the morning of that same day
Mr de Jager responded by email asking to be informed what
the net amount would be
available to the plaintiff should agent’s
commission be deducted from the proceeds of the sale, before the
proposed
transaction could be recommended;
[42.3]
on 13 March 2020 Mr de Jager
addressed a further email to the defendants, which said the
following:
“
We
considered the request and it was agreed that we will fund the
commission from the proceeds of the sale.
We
will, however, require a binding contractual commitment from the
shareholders / sureties / shareholders of the
sureties
as to how the shortfall of approximately R5 m will be settled
before we consent to cancellation.
This
can be either in the form of a once-off payment or monthly payments
over a period. We are open to proposals / settlement negotiations.
Please
advise. You are welcome to contact me should you wish to discuss. If
in agreement, we can instruct Cristine to proceed with
the payment.”
[emphasis added]
[42.4]
later on the same day Mr de Jager
sent a further email to Mr du Plessis, the body of which
reads:
“
With
reference to our telephonic discussion, according to my records the
following companies signed surety for On Air Investment
Holdings
(Pty) Ltd to the amount of R13,540,000 each:
1.
First National Core (Pty) Ltd;
2.
Charge Up Trade and Invest (Pty) Ltd;
3.
Sapling Trade and Invest 39 (Pty) Ltd.
I will advise
Christine that we will consent to the transfer of the properties
against payment / guarantees to the amount of R25 952 370.00.”
[42.5]
on 31 July 2020, Mr du Plessis
wrote to Mr de Jager in the following terms:
“
I
needed to most sincerely thank you guys at Absa for the different
roles you have played in the culmination of this sale. We at
OAI are
most appreciative of the substantial write-offs that Absa eventually
made and wish to reiterate that the deal would not
have happened
without your help.
Your assistance was
instrumental in making this happen and we are so grateful for your
perseverance, understanding and decisive
action.”
[43]
The opposing affidavit does not provide any
further context or background information to the string of emails. No
attempt is made
to provide detail of the telephonic discussion
referred to in the second email from Mr de Jager on
13 March 2020,
nor concerning the write-offs. What was the
discussion about the sureties which appears from Mr de Jager’s
email to have
been important to the plaintiff? Reading this email
without any background or context it appears to suggest some level of
comfort
on the part of the plaintiff to agree to the sale of the
property because of the suretyships in place by the second, third and
fourth defendants. Did the discussion possibly concern the release of
On Air from liability, but not the sureties? I am unable to
consider
this because neither the plaintiff nor the defendants offered any
assistance. The comfort of the plaintiff to permit the
transaction to
proceed because of the suretyships is certainly suggested in
Mr de Jager’s first email to Mr du Plessis
on 13 March 2020. The suggestion in this email that the
plaintiff was open to proposals or settlement negotiations is left
hanging and there is no objective evidence that the outstanding
balance was written off or compromised. These are matters on which
the defendants would at trail bear the onus.
[44]
The email from Mr du Plessis on 31 July
2020 referring to substantial right-offs made by the plaintiff is
discordant
with the preceding emails dealt with above. It is
commercially unlikely that the plaintiff, holding security in the
form of suretyships
from the second to fourth defendants would have
regarded a write-off of the full outstanding balance as being an
acceptable proposal
or settlement. Counsel for the defendants urged
me not to shut the door on the defendants who it was said have shown
a triable
issue. The door has been shut by the defendants themselves
through their failure to demonstrate that they do indeed have a
bona
fide
defence to the action. I should
make it clear that my decision is not solely based on the affidavit
evidence of Mr de Jager which
disputes the compromise. But this
affidavit aligns sufficiently with the emails to conclude that the
defence of compromise has
not been established as bona fide.
[45]
The defendants have not advanced a case that is
bona fide and which has disclosed fully the nature and grounds of
their defence
and the material facts relied on. In the result the
plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment.
[46]
I make the following orders:
In
case number 15210/2020
:
1.
Summary judgment is refused.
2.
The costs of the application are reserved for
determination by the trial court.
In
case number 41768/2020
:
1.
Summary judgment is granted against the
defendants jointly and severally for:
(a)
payment of the amount of R6 273 714,24;
(b)
interest on this amount at the rate of 7% per
annum, calculated and capitalised monthly from 23 October 2020
to date of payment;
2.
Costs of suit on the scale as between attorney
and client.
N.J.
GRAVES
Acting
Judge of the High Court of
South
Africa
Gauteng
Local Division
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES
:
Date of
hearing:
Case no:
2020/15210: 11 October 2021
Case no: 2020/41768: 12
October 2021
Date
of judgment:
15 March 2022
Counsel for the plaintiff
(Case no: 2020/15210):
ADV. N Alli
Instructed
by:
Jay Mothibi Inc
Counsel
for the defendants (Case no (2020/15210):
ADV. D VETTEN
Instructed
by:
BDK Attorneys
Counsel
for the plaintiff (Case no: 2020/41768):
ADV. N ALLI
Instructed
by:
Jay Mothibi Inc
Counsel
for the defendants (Case no (2020/41768):
ADV. S SWARTZ
Instructed
by:
Stan Fanaroff & Associates
[1]
2020 (6)
SA 624 (WCC).
[2]
At
para [15].
[3]
Para
8.1.1 of the Task Team Memorandum referred to in para [8] of the
Tumileng
judgment,
read with para 3.1 of that Memorandum.
I
disclose that I was privileged to be a member of the Task Team which
considered this topic and made recommendations to the Rules
Board,
substantially captured in the Memorandum referred to in the
Tumileng
judgment
at para [8].
[4]
Tumileng
,
para [2].
[5]
sv
“
Rule 32
– Summary Judgment
”
,
pp. 78 and onwards.
[6]
WCC
case number 20266/2015, dated 12 September 2016.
[7]
Most
notably that of Corbett
JA
in
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1)
SA 418 (A) at 423 D-H.
[8]
Tumileng
at
para [22]. Binns-Ward
J
makes this point by continuing to use the phrase ‘
bona
fide
defence’
from the old rule.
[9]
Compare
the protections introduced for a defendant by the Constitutional
Court in
Twee
Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd v Land and Agricultural Development Bank of
South Africa t/a The Land Bank
2011
(1) SA 1
(CC). The procedural advantages enjoyed by a plaintiff
under
Rule 8
arise from the status of the liquid document- se at
para [15].
[10]
The
concern expressed here was that if the phrase ‘an issue for
trial’ in subrule 32(2)(b) merely means the bones
of a triable
defence then it would be impossible to marry this with the
requirement in subrule 32(3)(b) that a bona fide defence
must be
shown.
[11]
See:
Easyair
Limited (Trading as Openair) v Opal Telecom Limited
[2009]
EWHC 399
(Ch) at para
[15]
. Despite the differences between our
Rule
32
and C.P.R 24 in England and Wales.
[12]
The
Second Coming
by
W.B. Yeats.
[13]
As
carefully traced by Prof. J.A. Faris in his article
The
Historical Context of Summary Judgment in South Africa: Politics,
Policy and Procedure
(2010)
LXIII CILSA 352.
[14]
Aquila
WSA Aviation Opportunities II Ltd v Onur Air Tasimacilik AS
[2018]
EWHC 519
(Comm), at para [27].
[15]
Both
Subrules having been substituted by GN R842 of 31 May
2019.
[16]
2009
(5) SA 1 (SCA).
[17]
At
para [32].
[18]
The
plea is an admixture of a standard pleading and an affidavit in
narrative form. Whether this was occasioned by the amended
summary
judgment procedure is notionally possible, but practically
unimportant.
[19]
For
narrative purposes I refer to documents mentioned in the plea, but
not attached. These were subsequently attached to the affidavit
opposing summary judgment.
[20]
It
is unclear what commercial instruments were involved concerning this
loan funding.
[21]
Erven
292 and 293 are significant because of the covering bond in favour
of the Plaintiff.
[22]
Section
68(3)
of this statute provides:
“
(3)
If the land to be encumbered by a
personal servitude is mortgaged or subject to any other real
right
with which the said personal servitude may conflict, the bond or
other registered deed by which such right is held shall
be produced
to the registrar together with a consent in writing of the legal
holder of such bond or other right to the registration
of the said
personal servitude and, in the case of a bond, free from the bond.”
[23]
The
latter right must be accepted as being legitimately claimed.
[24]
On
my reading of
section 68(3)
of Act 47 of 1937 I understand this to
require that the servitude be registered without any encumbrance of
the bond, which was
in place over Erven 292 and 293.
[25]
This
bond does not feature in the action.
[26]
The
letter was ultimately annexed to the affidavit opposing summary
judgment. This also occurred in respect of further documents
which
were referred to in the plea, but not annexed thereto.
[27]
The
header on this email refers to a
transfer
from
Sable Hills Waterfront Estate CC and references Erven 292 and
293, Sable Hills Waterfront Estate Township. The meaning
of this is
unclear and as no suggestion of transfer appears in the papers it is
likely that this was intended to refer to cancellation
of the bond.
[28]
The
reliance on security over Erven 292 and 293 is contradictory of the
defendants’ stance that this security should have
been
released in exchange for the bond over the Farm Tweefontein.
[29]
See:
Stamford
Sales & Distribution (Pty) Ltd v Metraclark (Pty) Ltd
[2014]
ZASCA 79
(29 May 2014).
[30]
The
analysis of the
Stamford
Sales
judgment
by Binns-Ward
J
in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Future Indefinite Investments 201 (Pty) Ltd
above
explains how this judgment should be read and I respectfully agree
with the analysis.
[31]
I
leave aside for present purposes the justifiable observations in
paragraph [40] of
Tumileng
concerning
the possible tension between subrule 32(2)(b) and that in subrule
(3)(b).
[32]
Compare
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank
1976 (1)
SA 418 (A), at 426 A-E;
Tesven
CC and Another v South African Bank of Athens
2000 (1)
SA 268 (SCA), para [22].
[33]
Compare
Beadica
v Trustees, Oregon Trust
2020 (5)
SA 247 (CC), at paras [80] and [87].
[34]
Maharaj
,
at 423 F.
[35]
2006 (6)
SA 379 (C).
[36]
At
paras [18] to [25].
[37]
This
email refers to a trailing email which is curiously not attached.
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