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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 391
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## Heydenrych v Forsyth (A5015/2019)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 391 (31 May 2022)
Heydenrych v Forsyth (A5015/2019)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 391 (31 May 2022)
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sino date 31 May 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A5015/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the matter between
:
GERHARD
CHRISTOPHER HEYDENRYCH
APPELLANT
AND
HOWARD
BRUCE MORTIMER FORSYTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
THE
COURT:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The core issue that arises for determination in this appeal is the
question whether the credit agreement concluded between the
appellant
and the respondent (“the agreement”) was one at arm’s
length, and hence subject to the National Credit
Act 34 of 2005 (“the
NCA”). More particularly, whether the respondent had to be
registered as a credit provider in
terms of section 41 of the NCA.
[2]
The parties are both natural persons. It is trite that the
requirement to register as a credit provider is applicable to all
credit agreements once the prescribed threshold is reached,
irrespective of whether the credit provider is involved in the credit
industry and irrespective of whether the credit agreement is a
once-off transaction.
[1]
It is
common cause that the respondent did not apply to be registered as a
credit provider.
[3]
The court
a quo
agreed with the respondent that the agreement
was not one at arm’s length and hence not subject to the NCA.
The appellant
seeks to overturn this finding; leave to appeal having
been granted by the court
a quo
.
CONDONATION
[4]
The appellant seeks condonation for his non-compliance with Rule
49(6)(a) and (b) of the Uniform Rules of Court, that is, the
failure
to prosecute the appeal timeously. Leave to appeal was granted on the
25 March 2019. The appellant filed his application
for a hearing date
and the filing of the record on 19 August 2019, which was 24 days
after the due date.
[5]
In
Bertie
Van Zyl (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister for Safety and Security and
Others,
[2]
the Constitutional Court held that in determining whether condonation
may be granted, lateness is not the only consideration.
The test
for condonation is whether it is in the interests of justice to grant
condonation. Factors relevant to a condonation enquiry
include, but
are not limited to, the extent and the cause of delay; the
prejudice to other litigants; the reasonableness of
the explanation
for the delay; the importance of the issues to be decided in the
intended appeal; and the prospects of success.
None of these factors
is however decisive: the enquiry is one of weighing each against the
others and determining what the interests
of justice dictate.
[3]
In
United
Plant Hire v Hills,
[4]
the
court held that a reasonable prospect of success on the appeal is not
a
sine
qua non f
or
condonation. It is sufficient if the appeal is
prima
facie
arguable.
[5]
[6]
The appellant demonstrated good cause for
his non-compliance with the Rules. The delay was occasioned by his
failure to find the
court file timeously having made various attempts
to find it. Thereafter he had difficulties in getting the
transcripts. The delay
is also of a relatively short duration and
there is no prejudice to any party including the respondent.
[7]
Consequently, we are inclined to grant the appellant condonation for
the delay in prosecuting the appeal.
THE
FACTS
[8]
The respondent and the appellant have known each other for a period
of 35 years. The appellant and the respondent were brothers-in-law;
the respondent was married to the appellant’s elder sister for
33 years.
[9]
In 2007, the appellant acquired a business, a property holding entity
named West Dunes Property 232 (Pty) Limited (“West
Dunes”)
which owned an immovable property. This business entailed the
renovation of the immovable property and then renting
out rooms to
university students for profit. Appellant sought investors for this
venture and the respondent agreed to invest by
buying a percentage of
the shares in West Dunes, hoping for a dividend return on his
investment.
[10]
In May 2008, appellant acquired a further immovable property, Blue
Moonlight. He again sought investors in order to fund both
the
purchase and renovation of the property in question. The respondent
again agreed to invest and purchased 25 shares at R44 000
a share at
a total cost of R1 100 000.00.
[11]
West Dunes also sought to acquire shares in Blue Moonlight, but did
not have the funds to buy any shares, nor could it raise
such funds
from a financial institution.
[12]
The appellant was aware that the respondent had recently obtained an
access facility from Standard Bank of South Africa (“Standard
Bank”) through a mortgage facility over his home. The
respondent’s home was not registered in his name, but was
registered
in the name of his property holding company, Ceefax
Property (Pty) Limited (“Ceefax”). The bond was also in
the name
of Ceefax. During the trial, the appellant contended that he
did not know that the respondent's home was registered in the name
of
Ceefax, and had he known, he would not have entered into the
agreement because he did not want to borrow money from Ceefax.
[13]
The appellant, on behalf of West Dunes, approached the respondent for
a possible loan to West Dunes. The respondent agreed
to loan such
funds to West Dunes at an interest rate of prime minus 1.7%. That is
the same interest rate the respondent was paying
on the mortgage bond
over the property. The respondent would acquire such funds through
Ceefax’s access facility with Standard
Bank.
[14]
Not long thereafter the appellant asked the respondent to lend him
R660 000.00 to pay for the 15 shares he (the appellant)
had
subscribed for in Blue Moonlight at a cost of R44 000.00 per share.
The respondent agreed to assist the appellant and to lend
him the
money. The parties accordingly signed the agreement in respect of
such a loan on 12 October 2008, just over a month after
a similar
agreement in respect of the West Dunes loan was entered into on 10
September 2008. In terms of the agreement the respondent
lent the
appellant an amount of R660 000.00, again at the same rate that the
respondent was paying on the access facility on the
bond over his
home i.e. prime minus 1.7%.
[15]
Pursuant to the above, the respondent paid R660 000.00 from Ceefax’s
mortgage bond facility directly to the appellant.
The appellant made
regular payments into the Ceefax bond account until 31 July 2017.
Thereafter he made no further payments. Ten
years later the loan was
still outstanding.
As a result, the
respondent,
as plaintiff
a
quo
,
instituted action against the appellant, as defendant
a
quo
, for repayment of monies lent and
advanced by the respondent to the appellant pursuant to the agreement
between the parties.
SECTION
4 OF THE NCA
[16]
In terms of section 40(1)(b) of the NCA, subject to certain
exceptions, a person must register as a credit provider if the
total
of the loan amounts lent out by that person to individuals (and small
juristic persons) exceeds the prescribed threshold
[6]
.
The exceptions are listed in section 4 of the NCA. Section 4(1)
provides that the NCA applies to every credit agreement between
parties dealing at arm’s length, meaning that if the parties
were not dealing at arm’s length, then this would constitute
an
exception to the rule that all credit providers need to register as
such.
[17]
The appellant submits that the agreement was an agreement concluded
at arm’s length and that the respondent ought to
have complied
with section 40(1)(b) of the NCA and be registered as a credit
provider.
[18]
Section 4(2)(b) (iii) and (iv) of the NCA provides that in any of the
following arrangements,
the parties are not dealing at arm’s
length:
“
(iii)
A credit agreement between natural persons, who are on a familial
relationship and-
(aa) are co- dependent
on each other; or
(bb) one is dependent
on the other; and
(iv) any other
agreement-
(aa) in which each
party is not independent of the other and consequently does not
necessarily strive to obtain the outmost possible
advantage out of
the transaction; or
(bb) that is of a type
that has been held in law to be between parties who are not dealing
are not dealing at arm’s length;”
[19]
Section 4(2)(b)(iv) consists of two parts, section 4(2)(b)(iv(aa) and
(bb). Although the NCA does not define “dealing
at arm’s
length”, it is apparent that the Legislature intended that
credit agreements between natural persons who are
(a) in a familial
relationship, and who are co- dependent on each other or where the
one is dependent upon the other, and (b) any
agreement where each
party is not independent of the other and does not strive to obtain
the utmost advantage out of the transaction,
are not within arm’s
length and thus not susceptible to the provisions of the NCA. In this
regard the dictum in
Hicklin
v Secretary for Inland Revenue
,
[7]
is instructive. Trollip JA stated:
“
For
‘dealing at arm's length’ is a useful and often easily
determinable premise from which to start the inquiry. It
connotes
that each party is independent of the other and, in so dealing, will
strive to get the utmost possible advantage out of
the transaction
for himself. Indeed, in the Afrikaans text the corresponding phrase
is "die uiterste voorwaardes beding".
[20]
As far as the term “familial relationship” is concerned,
there is also no definition found
in the NCA. This being so, it is
useful to have regard to other legislation containing similar
provisions. Section 2(1) of the
Companies Act
[8]
provides:
“
(
1)
For all purposes of this Act— (a) an individual is related to
another individual if they—
(i) are married, or
live together in a relationship similar to marriage; or
(ii) are separated by
no more than two degrees of natural or adopted consanguinity of
affinity.”
[21]
Section 1 of the Income Tax Act
[9]
is also of assistance. It contains a definition of "connected
persons", which means:
“
(a)
ln relation to a natural person—
(i)
Any relative; and
(ii)
Any trust (other than a
portfolio of a collective investment scheme in securities or a
portfolio of a collective investment scheme
in property) of which
such natural person or such relative is a beneficiary.
[22]
A "relative" is defined in the Income Tax Act as:
“
In
relation to any person, means the spouse of that person or anybody
related to that person or that person's spouse within the
third
degree of consanguinity, or any spouse of anybody so related, and for
the purpose of determining the relationship between
any child
referred to in the definition of 'child' in this section and any
other person, that child shall be deemed to be related
to the
adoptive parent of that child within the first degree of
consanguinity.”
[23]
Taking into consideration the above definitions, and applying a
common sense approach to the meaning of the word “familial
relationships”, there is no reason to exclude brothers-in-law.
The appellant and the respondent were clearly in a familial
relationship. That being said, two questions arose: One, were they
co-dependent on each other; or was one dependent on the other,
and
two, did the parties strive to obtain the utmost advantage out of the
transaction?
[24]
The terms "dependent" and "co-dependent", as used
in section 4(2)(b)(iii) of the NCA, are similarly not
defined in the
NCA. The meaning of the word "dependent” is, however,
variously defined as: Relying on or requiring the
aid or support of
another;
[10]
Relying on
someone or something else for aid, support, etc.;
[11]
Requiring someone or something for financial support;
[12]
and, needing somebody/something in order to survive or be
successful.
[13]
In this vein,
loans between related parties or loans between parties where the one
has some influence or measure of control over
the other are not loans
between independent parties.
[25]
In
Dayan
v Dayan,
[14]
a
judgment of the Full Court of this Division, the court was,
inter
alia,
concerned with the question whether the agreement between the
appellant and respondent was one at arm’s length and hence
subject to the provisions of the NCA. At paragraph [9] of its
judgment, the court approvingly referred to
Hicklin
[15]
,
and held as follows:
“
In
addition the agreement was entered into by half-brothers who had a
close relationship and who concluded a number of transactions
over
the period. The transactions included loans, transfer of immovable
property, an employment contract and a number of payments
of salary.
These two persons were related as contemplated by the Section. When
they concluded the loan agreement in question they
were not dealing
at arm's length. The parties were not independent of each other and
were not striving to gain utmost advantage
for themselves out of the
transaction.”
[26]
In
the
matter of
Fourie
v Geyer
,
[16]
the plaintiff claimed that the relationship was not at arm’s
length due to the 18 year relationship between the parties.
The court
rejected this argument due to the commercial nature of the agreement
and the salient features thereof. The court held
that it was evident
that the parties were striving to gain the best possible advantage.
In
Claasen
t/a Mostly Media v Delport t/a AD Industrial Chemicals
,
[17]
reliance was placed on the NCA because the parties were friends,
mixed socially and did business together. The plaintiff contended
that the defendant was dependent on him for financial assistance and
that the relationship thus was not at arm’s length.
The court
held that the parties were independent of each other and that the
agreement was concluded at arm’s length. The
court however
placed great reliance on the terms of the agreement which imposed
interest and penalties on the arrears. In
Cloete
v Van den Heever NO,
[18]
however,
the court held that an agreement between close acquaintances, at an
interest rate charged to the credit provider by his
bank, was not at
arm’s length.
[27]
Although decided cases are a useful tool, it is well established that
every case should be decided on its own facts. In the
present matter
the parties are brothers- in- law. They have known each other for 35
years. They spent many Christmas’, Easters,
birthdays and
family gatherings together. They were also extremely close on an
emotional level. The respondent was the first person
the appellant
turned to on the day the appellant’s son tragically committed
suicide. Moreover, the respondent invested in
three of the
appellant’s business ventures because he saw that as support
for his brother-in-law.
[28]
At the trial the respondent testified that he and appellant were in a
familial relationship and that the appellant was dependent
on the
respondent in many respects. He also testified that the original
agreement was concluded on terms which in no way benefitted
him,
meaning that he did not strive to obtain the utmost possible
advantage out of the transaction. The appellant would repay the
same
amount plus interest that the respondent would have paid the
mortgagee (i.e. Standard Bank) on the amount withdrawn from the
bond.
The appellant was not concerned that Ceefax appeared to be the bond
holder. His sister had instructed him in writing on 03
October 2008,
to make the monthly payments in respect of the West Dunes loan into
the Ceefax bond account at the Standard Bank,
to which he did not
object. The appellant also chose not to obtain finance from any arm’s
length finance institution due
to his impending divorce. He
approached the respondent who loaned him an amount of R660 000,00
which money he would not have
lent to anybody other than a very
familiar family member.
[29]
The respondent bore the onus to prove his case. The evidence
demonstrated, at least, on a balance of probabilities, that the
appellant and the respondent were not independent of each other, and
did not strive to obtain the utmost possible advantage out
of the
transaction. The court
a quo
correctly concluded that the loan
agreement between the parties was not one at arm's length. The
transaction therefore falls within
the ambit of the provisions of
section 4 (2)(b)(iii) of the NCA.
[30]
As a result the following order is made:
1. The appeal is
dismissed with costs.
WEINER
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
I
agree.
WINDELL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
I
agree.
NEMAVHIDI
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the appellant:
Adv. N.J. Riley
Instructed
by:
Mendelson Attorneys Inc.
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv. A. Williamson
Instructed
by:
Wayne Venter Attorneys
Date
of hearing:
26 January 2022
Date
of judgment:
31 May 2022
[1]
Du
Bruyn NO and Others v Karsten
2019
(1) SA 403
(SCA) at [28].
[2]
2010
(2) SA 181 (CC).
[3]
Bernert
v Absa Bank Ltd
2011
(3) SA 92
(CC) a
t
[14].
[4]
1976(1)
SA 717 (A)
at
720 E-G.
[5]
Van
der Merwe v
Steenkamp
1925
OPD 179.
[6]
At the time of the conclusion of the agreement the prescribed
threshold was R500 000,00. See Government Gazette 28893 of 1 June
2006.
[7]
1980 (1) SA 481
(A) at 495A-B.
[8]
Act
71 of 2008.
[9]
Act
58 of 1962.
[10]
Thefreedictionary.com
[11]
Dictionary.com.
[12]
Lexico.com
[13]
oxfordleamersdictionartes.com
[14]
[2011]
JOL 27225
GSJ.
[15]
Supra
[16]
(MKP27/2018)
[2019] ZANWHC (22 August 2019)
[17]
(16123I2008)
[2009] ZAWCHC 84
(4 June 2009)
[18]
2013
JDR 1075 (GNP)
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