Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 405South Africa
Spar Group Limited v Lifestyle Diners (Pty) Ltd t/a Diepsloot Spar and Diepsloot Tops (A5035/21 ; 15771/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 405 (20 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 June 2022
Headnotes
DISMISSAL OF AN APPLICATION FOR PERFECTION OF A GENERAL NOTARIAL COVERING BOND, appeal upheld with costs.
Judgment
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## Spar Group Limited v Lifestyle Diners (Pty) Ltd t/a Diepsloot Spar and Diepsloot Tops (A5035/21 ; 15771/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 405 (20 June 2022)
Spar Group Limited v Lifestyle Diners (Pty) Ltd t/a Diepsloot Spar and Diepsloot Tops (A5035/21 ; 15771/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 405 (20 June 2022)
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sino date 20 June 2022
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no: A5035/21 /
15771/21
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
THE
SPAR GROUP LIMITED
Applicant
and
LIFESTYLE
DINERS (PTY) LTD t/a DIEPSLOOT SPAR AND
DIEPSLOOT
TOPS
Respondent
Case
Summary
: DISMISSAL OF AN
APPLICATION FOR PERFECTION OF A GENERAL NOTARIAL COVERING BOND,
appeal upheld with costs.
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI J (TWALA et
OPPERMAN JJ Concurring)
[1]
The appeal before us concerns a dismissal of an application for
perfection of a general
notarial covering bond registered in favour
of the appellant by the respondent.
[2]
The issue for determination is whether or not the court a quo was
correct in dismissing
the perfection application and accepting the
respondent’s version that there was an indefinite extension for
payment of arrears
as was agreed upon in the meeting of the parties
held on 5 March 2021 based on the Business Lease Agreement.
[3]
The appellant is a wholesaler of groceries and household goods who
also sells stock
and equipment and franchises its brands to various
customers in the retail(s) business. The respondent is a retailer and
carries
on business as a Spar supermarket and Tops liquor store under
the trading names of “Diepsloot SPAR” and “Diepsloot
TOPS” respectively. The brands used by the respondent are the
intellectual property of the applicant.
[4]
The appellant supplied trading stock to the respondent on credit. The
trading stock
was supplied either in the form of direct purchases
from the appellant’s warehouse or by way of drop shipment
purchases.
The payment terms agreed to were 19 (nineteen) days from
date of weekly statement in respect of warehouse transactions, and 31
days from date of weekly statement in respect of drop shipment
transactions.
[5]
It is common cause that on 10 July 2020 a general notarial covering
bond was registered
in favour of the appellant as security over the
respondent’s movable assets following an agreement between the
parties that
the respondent will become a Spar retailer and purchase
stock on credit. In terms of the notarial bond, the respondent
declared
itself indebted in the total sum of R37 400 000
(thirty seven million four hundred thousand rand) in respect of the
capital
and additional sums and as security for the due payment of
its indebtedness to the appellant. The respondent also bound and
hypothecated
generally all of its movable property as defined in the
bond (that is corporeal and incorporeal property) which it then had
or
which it might from time to time thereafter acquire or be
possessed of.
[6]
The notarial bond provided for the remedies to which the appellant
would be entitled
in any circumstances involving default in payments.
The remedies included taking possession and retaining all or any of
the respondent’s
movable property, carrying on the business of
the respondent in the name of and at the expense of the respondent
and to realize
all or any of the respondent’s movable property
(perfection).
[7]
In terms of a reservation of ownership, in the event of the
occurrence of any of the
mentioned circumstances, the appellant was
afforded the right to repossess all goods sold and delivered by the
appellant to the
respondent and which the respondent continued to
hold in stock, up to an amount sufficient to discharge the
respondent’s
indebtedness to the respondent, and to cancel the
sales in respect of such repossessed goods. The account of the
respondent would
be credited by the value of the goods repossessed.
[8]
The respondent fell into arrears with the payments due on its
warehouse and drop shipment
accounts and as of the 30
th
of
March 2021 the respondents were indebted to the appellant, on the
appellant’s version, in the total sum of R10 964 381.71
(ten million nine hundred and sixty four thousand three hundred and
eighty one rand seventy one cent), all of which was due, owing
and
payable.
[9]
As a consequence of the amount owing and payable and in arrears, the
respondent was
in breach of the notarial bond. This caused the
appellant to believe that its interests were being imperiled by the
respondent’s
conduct.
[10]
It was because of the breach of the bond that an application was
brought for perfection of the
general covering notarial bond.
[11]
The appellant relied on three distinct types of breaches of the bond
by the respondent, namely
a breach of each of clauses 10.1, 10.2 and
10.4 thereof. The court
a quo
, so contends the appellant
decided the matter on consideration of the alleged breach in terms of
clause 10.1, but overlooked and
failed to deal with the alleged
breaches in terms of clauses 10.2 and 10.4 at all.
[12]
The first breach in clause 10.1 is that the respondent was in default
of the terms of the bond,
in particular its obligation to pay, duly
and promptly, its trading debt for warehouse and drop shipments to
the appellant.
[13]
In opposing the perfection application, the respondent did not
dispute the amount owing but alleged
that at a meeting held with the
appellant’s representatives on 5 March 2021 pursuant to the
Business Lease Agreement, the
appellant undertook to assist the
respondent and gave the respondent an extension of time for the
payment of its debts to the appellant
and undertook to restructure
the debt. As a result, it was alleged that none of the amounts had
become due and payable.
[14]
The alleged arrangement as contended for by the respondent was
disputed by the appellant in its
replying affidavit. The appellant
contended that it had not agreed to restructure payments or to any
other extended terms for payment,
save for the further freezing of
the opening stock debt of R2.5 million. It further alleged that the
respondent had expressly agreed
to pay its current debt timely as and
when it fell due and that the so-called agreement was in breach of
the non-variation clause
in the bond as it had not been reduced to
writing and signed by both parties.
[15]
The court
a quo
held that the respondent’s version of an
extension of time and promised assistance by the appellant was not so
implausible
that it could be rejected out of hand. The court
a quo
found corroboration for its acceptance of the respondent’s
version in clause 3.14.1 of the Business Lease Agreement, which
provides for bi-monthly business performance review meetings. In
terms of this clause, if the business is not performing
satisfactorily,
the parties jointly will decide on appropriate
actions to remediate the non-performance of the business. According
to the court
a quo’s
finding, the non-payment of its
debts had to be regarded as a form of non-performance of the business
and could be the subject-matter
of such agreed remedial actions.
[16]
The court
a quo
was concerned by the fact that within a few
days, that is 14 March 2021, the appellant had made demand for
payment when a deferment
of payment arrangement was in place for
payment of a variety of debts amounting in total to R8 671 674
-61 (eight million
six hundred and seventy one thousand six hundred
seventy four rand and sixty one cent) and upon the respondent’s
failure
to pay the amount demanded in five days, cancelled the
Business Lease Agreement on 24 March 2021.
[17]
The court
a quo
was also interested in what the payment date
would be for the deferred opening stock debt. It held that as there
was no definite
date agreed, the law determines that payment can only
be called up on giving a reasonable period of notice to the
respondent.
[18]
At the hearing of the application before the court
a quo
, the
opening stock formed part of the total debt certified in the
certificate of indebtedness (based upon the acceleration of the
payment date because of the defaults on the account). The court
a
quo
found that the appellant had not given reasonable notice for
the calling up of the opening stock debt. Consequently the court
a
quo
held that the appellant had acted unreasonably and that this
was sufficient to dismiss the application in its entirety.
[19]
One of the defenses raised by the respondent was that it did not have
property available for
attachment pursuant to the bond. The
respondent claimed that ownership of the trading stock supplied by
the appellant and the equipment
and assets leased from the appellant
vested in the appellant. Consequently, so it is implied, no
perfection of the notarial bond
is possible on those movable assets.
This is, without doubt, a correct position on the law. It is not
possible to claim perfection
on assets that one owns as a credit
grantor. This however is not the entire position as it will appear
hereunder.
[20]
If regard is had to how the notarial bond is structured it is evident
that the bond hypothecates
generally all of the respondent’s
“movable property which is defined as “corporeal movable
property and incorporeal
movable property of every description
wheresoever same may be situate”. It follows that these assets
may include, but are
not limited to, furniture, computers, motor
vehicles, electrical appliances, bank accounts, book debts and any
other item that
the Sheriff may put on his inventory that belongs to
the respondent, in the process of preparing a list of assets that are
to be
attached. The point raised by the respondent on the perfection
of the appellant’s equipment and stock, will therefore not
apply to the movable property the examples of which is given in this
judgment. It follows therefore that perfection of the bond
may be
granted for those movable properties as well as incorporeal property
such as the goodwill of the business that belongs to
the respondent.
[21]
This is so especially given the fact that in terms of the bond, in
case of a breach, the appellant
is entitled to take possession of and
retain incorporeal property such as rights under the sub-lease, its
right to trade the business
and the use of SPAR brand names and its
rights under the business lease.
[22]
Clauses 10.8.1 and 10.8.2 of the bond permit the appellant to take
possession of and retain the
corporeal and incorporeal property in
case of a breach and carry on the business of the respondent relating
to the property in
the name of and at the expense of the respondent.
The defense raised by the respondent on this aspect is therefore
without merit.
[23]
In so far as the debt owed to it, the appellant’s case was that
R10 964 381.71
(ten million nine hundred and sixty four
thousand three hundred and eighty one rand and seventy one cent) was
due and payable on
the respondent’s outstanding trading debt.
The bond provides that the certificate of indebtedness would be prima
facie proof
of what is owed and payable.
[24]
The respondent has not countered the certificate of debt on the
quantum of its trading debt consisting
of warehouse and drop
shipment, but took issue with some other debts such as its
rental and utilities arrears, monthly interest
on capital expenditure
and accounting fees. Regard being had to the certificate of debt, its
defense regarding the R2.5 million
allegedly deferred, ought to have
been rejected by court
a quo.
[25]
The respondent also contends that clause 10.4 of the bond, which
deals with foreclosure based
upon a belief of imperilment of the
appellant’s interests, and clauses 10.8.2 – 10.8.5 which
deals with the power to
carry on respondent’s business, are
unfair unjust and inequitable and enforcement thereof will be against
public policy.
[26]
The principles governing the determination on whether or not a
provision in a contract is against
public policy are trite. In
NBS
Boland Ltd and Another v One Berg River Drive CC and others
[1]
the court had to determine whether a contractual discretionary power
was intended to be completely unfettered. Van Heerden DCJ
said the
following at para 25:
“
[25]
All this does not mean that an exercise of such a contractual
discretion is necessarily
unassailable. It may be voidable at the
instance of the other party. It is, I think, a rule of our common law
that unless a contractual
discretionary power was clearly intended to
be completely unfettered, an exercise of such a discretion must be
made arbitrio bono
viri.”
[27]
It is only in cases where the discretionary power conferred on one
party by the contract is exercised
unreasonably that the court should
intervene.
[2]
The party alleging
unreasonableness of the clause in the contract bears the onus to set
out facts upon which it is alleged that
the clause is against public
policy.
[28]
It is also a principle of our law that the common law of contract
does not allow parate execution
in a manner which infringes the right
of recourse to the courts entrenched in section 34 of the
Constitution.
[3]
In the instant
case the bond clause alleged to be contrary to public policy does not
give the appellant unfettered powers. It is
for exactly this reason
that the appellant approached the court
a
quo
for redress. I therefore find no basis that this clause 10.4 is
contrary to public policy. The perfection of a notarial bond under
circumstances such as the instant case is the feature of our law of
contracts giving effect thereto and having been recognized
by our
courts.
[4]
Our courts have held
that contractual provisions will be found to be contrary to public
policy only when that is their clear effect.
It follows that the
tendency of a proposed transaction towards such a conflict can only
be found to exist if there is a probability
that unconscionable,
immoral or illegal conduct will result from the implementation of the
provisions according to their tenor.
In the instant case no
immorality and illegality were alleged and proved by the respondent.
[29]
If however, a contractual provision is capable of implementation in a
manner that is against
public policy but the tenor of the provision
is neutral then the offending tendency is absent.
[5]
In the present case, no evidence was adduced before the court a quo
or before us that the clause allowing perfection, once a
determination
is made by the appellant that its interests are
imperiled, is against public policy. It follows that the contention
cannot succeed.
[30]
In the instant case, it is clear that the relationship between the
parties was regulated by both
the notarial bond which clearly and
lawfully secures the position of the appellant and the business lease
agreement which sets
out the manner in which the operational side of
the business is carried out.
[31]
It is in the interest of the respondent during the duration of the
agreement to be supported
as a Spar retailer making use of the SPAR
brand and having access to the favourable terms when the trading
stock is sold to it,
on credit to…..seems like this sentence
is not finished? This is so because in anticipation of the credit a
notarial general
notarial bond was registered in favour of the
appellant for the sum well in excess of R37 million out of which more
than R10 million
had been extended on credit.
[32]
In my view, once the respondent defaulted with its payments to the
sum of over R10 million, the
appellant correctly felt that its
interests were imperiled and was therefore justified in approaching a
court for perfection of
the bond.
[33]
In the law of contract, the principle of
facta
sunt servanda
is an important. Although our courts have the power to declare the
terms of a contract invalid on the ground that they are against
public policy, it has been held that public policy generally favours
the utmost freedom of contract, and requires that commercial
transactions should not be unduly trammeled by restrictions on that
freedom.
[6]
The powers to
declare a contract or clause in a contract contrary to public policy
must not simply be exercised merely because
the terms of such a
contract offend one’s individual sense of propriety and
fairness.
[7]
[34]
The appeal record does not evidence an alleged absence of good faith
on behalf of the appellant.
The parties who are engaged in a
legitimate business transaction have agreed upon the disputed
clauses. It therefore follows on
that ground that this contention
cannot be sustained and stands to be rejected.
[35]
The respondent also contends that the perfection application should
be transferred to the Magistrate’s
Court, alternatively, if a
perfection order is granted only costs on the Magistrate’s
Court scale should be awarded. This
contention cannot be supported by
any facts or law. The perfection application is based on specific
performance of a contract.
[36]
Section 46 (2)(c) of the Magistrates Court Act No: 32 of 1944
provides as follows:
“
Matters
beyond the jurisdiction
(2)
A court shall have no jurisdiction in matters-
(c)
in which it is sought specific performance without an alternative
of
payment of damages except in –
(i)
the rendering of an account in respect of which the claim does not
exceed the amount determined
by the Minister from time to time by
notice in the Gazette;
(ii)
the delivery of transfer of the property movable or immovable not
exceeding the amount determined
by the Minister from time to time by
notice in the Gazette.”
In the instant case, the
appellant sought to enforce the notarial bond terms and consequently
this falls outside of the Magistrates’
Court jurisdiction
because this case concerns specific performance and, in any event,
the amount due exceeds R10 million. Consequently,
the defense raised
by the respondent should fail.
[37]
Furthermore, the respondent has relied on authorities that are
distinguishable as those authorities
deal with matters under the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
[8]
The authorities relied upon (were later overruled where it was held
that both the High Court and the Magistrates’ Court have
concurrent jurisdiction.
[9]
A
court has no power to refuse to hear a matter within its
jurisdiction. The SCA rejected the idea that it was an abuse of the
process to choose to sue in the High Court when the Magistrate’s
Court also had jurisdiction. It was held that a choice could
not be
an abuse because the law gave a plaintiff or applicant exactly that
right.
[38]
It my view the court
a quo
erred in dismissing the application
for perfection based on the general notarial covering bond. It
therefore also follows that
the reliance by the court
a quo
that the debt has been restructured based on the meeting held on 21
March 2021 was a misdirection as this infringed on the non-variation
clause in the bond agreement which provides for the validity of any
variation on condition that it is reduced to writing and signed
by
both parties. No evidence was adduced before the court a quo that the
so – called agreement to restructure was in compliance
with the
non-variation clause.
ORDER
[39]
The following order is made:
(a)
The appeal is upheld with costs as between attorney and client.
(b)
The order of the court
a quo
is replaced with the following
order:
“
Having
read the documents filed of record, heard counsel and considered the
matter, it is ordered that:
1.
The applicant is authorized and empowered,
by itself, the Sheriff or such nominees/s appointed by the applicant
to: -
1.1
enter upon the premises of the respondent
at its principal place of business situated at Diepsloot SPAR and
Tops at Chuma Mall,
Cr R511 and 1
st
Avenue, Diepsloot, or any other place where any of the movable
property, corporeal or incorporeal of the respondent is situate,
of
every description, and to take possession of all the movable
property, corporeal or incorporeal, of the respondent, wherever
such
property may be situate for the purpose of perfecting applicant’s
security in terms of the General Notarial Covering
Bond No:
BN000011484/2020 registered in Johannesburg and annexed to the
applicant’s founding affidavit marked 3 (the bond),
and
directing that the respondent give possession of such movable
property to the applicant;
1.2
retain possession of the movable property
referred to in 1.1 as security for the respondent’s debts to
the applicant for so
long as the applicant deems fit.
1.3
in its sole discretion to carry on the
business of the respondent relating to movable property in the name
of and at the expense
of the respondent and for that purpose to
purchase goods and do whatever else the applicant deems necessary;
1.4
sign or subscribe on behalf of the
respondent to all applications or agreements for transfer of
licenses, quotas, permits, registration
certificates and the like
which relates to the movable property and to effect the session and
delegation of the rights and / or
obligations of the respondent as
lessee or lessor or under any lease to which the respondent is a
party;
1.5
operate and draw on the bank account of the
respondent and to instruct that all funds in such accounts or which
may be paid into
such accounts, be paid to the applicant or not be
withdrawn therefrom or to the order of the respondent.
1.6
in general to deal with the movable
property of the respondent in terms of the powers conferred upon the
applicant under and in
terms of clause 10.8 of the bond and in
particular: -
1.6.1
to sell and dispose of the movable property
of the respondent or any portion thereof in such manner and on such
terms as the applicant
may decide and to convey valid title to the
purchaser/s and / or transferee/s and to collect in all monies due to
the respondent
in respect thereof;
1.6.2
sign and complete all forms, declarations,
agreements and the like as might be necessary or desirable to record
the sale, disposal
and / or transfer as the case may be of any of the
movable property;
1.6.3
to realise by public auction or by private
treaty or otherwise all or any of the movable property.
2.
The applicant is granted the right to
repossess all goods sold and delivered by the applicant to the
respondent and which the respondent
continues to hold in stock, up to
an amount sufficient to discharge the respondent’s indebtedness
to the applicant, and to
cancel the sales in respect of such
repossessed goods.
3.
The costs of this application shall be
borne and paid for by the respondent as between attorney and client.”
M.L. SENYATSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I agree ;
M TWALA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I agree ;
I OPPERMAN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Heard:
31 January 2022
Judgment:
20 June 2022
Counsel for
Applicants:
Adv F. Strydom
Instructed by:
Moss Marsh and Georgiev
Counsel for Respondent:
Adv R. du Plessis SC
Instructed
by:
Geyser van Rooyen Attorneys
[1]
1999
(4) SA 928
(SCA) at para 25
[2]
See
Absa
Bank Ltd v Lombard
(178 of 2004)
[2005] ZASCA 27
(30 March 2005)
[3]
See
Bock
and others v Duburoro Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2003] 4 All SA 103 (SCA)
[4]
See
N
Juglal NO Jumbo Trust t/a O.K. Foods Port Shepstone v Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd t/a O.K. Franchise Division
[5]
See
N
Juglal NO Jumbo Trust t/a O.K Foods Port Shepstone v Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd
(supra)
[6]
See
Beadica 231 CC v Trustees, Oregon Trust,
2020 (5) SA 247
(cc) and
Sasfin
(Pty) Ltd v Beukes
(149/87)
[1988] ZASCA 94
at para 13.
[7]
See
Olsen
v Standaloft
1983 (2) SA 668
(ZS) at 673G.
[8]
See
Nedbank
Ltd v Thobejane
2019 (1) SA 594
(GP) and Nedbank Ltd v Gqurana 2019 (6) SA 139
(ECG).
[9]
See
Standard
Bank v Mpongo
[2021] ZASCA 92
(25 June 2021).
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