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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 428
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## Spark v Hard Hat Equipment Hire (PROPRIETARY) Limited : In re: Hard Hat Equipment Hire (PROPRIETARY) Limited v K2014137790 (PROPRIETARY) Limited (1319/2019)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 428 (21 June 2022)
Spark v Hard Hat Equipment Hire (PROPRIETARY) Limited : In re: Hard Hat Equipment Hire (PROPRIETARY) Limited v K2014137790 (PROPRIETARY) Limited (1319/2019)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 428 (21 June 2022)
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# HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
# (GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: 1319/2019
REPORTABLE: No.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No.
REVISED.
DATE: 21 JUNE 2022
In the matter between:
HECTOR
HAROLD SPARK
Applicant
and
HARD
HAT EQUIPMENT HIRE (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Respondent
In re:
HARD
HAT EQUIPMENT HIRE (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Plaintiff
And
K2014137790
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
First
Defendant
And
HECTOR
HAROLD
SPARK
Second Defendant
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
1.
This
Judgment is delivered in response to a request for a written judgment
and the reasons therefor by the Respondent’s legal
representatives, and to clarify the order granted on 10 November
2020.
2.
This
matter relates to an application which involved two parties. The
Applicant in the matter was the Second Defendant in the action,
and
the Respondent was the Plaintiff in the action. In this Judgment, and
for ease of reference, the parties will be referred to
as the
Plaintiff and the Second Defendant.
3.
The
Plaintiff’s cause of action against the Second Defendant is
based on a Suretyship Agreement (“the Suretyship”),
which
arose out of the Second Defendant signing a customer application.
4.
When
the matter was argued before this Court, the issue between the
Plaintiff and the Second Defendant was whether the Suretyship
was
valid and enforceable.
5.
In
this regard Judgment had previously been granted in favour of the
Plaintiff against the Second Defendant for the full amount
of the
Plaintiff’s claim plus interest and costs, and the matter
against the Second Defendant was postponed
sine
die.
6.
Both
parties submitted in argument presented to the Court that the matter
was a question of law, and that nothing was triable.
7.
In
its written Heads of Argument, the Plaintiff further stated that it
was common cause that the only remaining issue between the
Plaintiff
and the Second Defendant was whether the suretyship was valid and
enforceable.
8.
There
were initial disputes between the parties regarding whether or not
the Applicant had been entitled to amend his plea in consequence
of
an amendment to the particulars of claim by the Respondent.
9.
As
the validity and enforceability of the suretyship, including its
rectification, are material to this matter, I will deal firstly
with
these issues below, and thereafter deal further with the amendments
to the Applicant’s pleadings.
10.
The
matter was argued on the basis that the issues between the parties
were narrow and turned on a dispute of law, rather than a
dispute of
fact and Counsel for the Respondent submitted that the only remaining
issues to be considered were whether –
a.
The
Suretyship was valid or invalid; and
b.
If
invalid, whether the suretyship fell to be rectified.
11.
The
wording of the Suretyship reads as follows –
“
I,
the undersigned Hector Harold Spark, signatory of these terms and
conditions do hereby bind myself to the client (the First Defendant)
as surety and co-principal debtor for the due performance by the
client’s (the First Defendant’s) obligations to HH
(the
Plaintiff) pursuant to these terms and conditions
”
.
12.
In
considering whether the Suretyship is valid and enforceable, it is
also necessary to consider the issue of rectification.
13.
I
was referred to the case of Inventive Labour Structuring (Pty) Ltd v
Corfe
2006 (3) SA 107
(SCA) (“the Inventive Judgment”).
14.
It
was held in this case that as a general rule the determination of
whether rectification of a Suretyship should be considered
or not
involves a two-stage enquiry the first to determine whether the
formal requirements contained in section 6 of the General
Law
Amendment Act 50 of 1956 are met, and the focal point at this stage
to determine whether the written document, on its face,
constitutes a
valid contract of Suretyship or not.
15.
If
it does not, the enquiry ends there.
16.
Only
if it does, does the enquiry then move to a second leg, which focuses
on whether a proper case for rectification has been made
out.
17.
Jafta
JA in the Inventive Judgment and at [4] stated that “It is now
settled that a deed of suretyship which is invalid for
want of
compliance with the formal requirements of s 6 of the General Law
Amendment Act 50 of 1956 (“the Act”) cannot
be rectified
so as to make it comply, and citing as authority the case of
Intercontinental Exports (Pty) Ltd v Fowles
1999 (2) SA 1045
(SCA)
paras [9] – [10] at 1051 C – G.
18.
It
should be noted that section 6 of the Act provides that:
“
No
contract of suretyship entered into after the commencement of this
Act shall be valid, unless the terms thereof are embodied
in a
written document signed by the surety …”.
19.
In
the Inventive Judgment, the surety and the principal debtor were the
same and they were names of a natural person, and this rendered
the
suretyship capable of at least two possible interpretations –
a.
That
the surety and the principal debtor were one and the same person; and
b.
Secondly
that they were two parties with identical names.
20.
It
was held that the first interpretation would lead to non-compliance
with the necessary formal requirements because in South African
law a
person cannot stand surety for his or her own debt, and on this
interpretation the suretyship would fail to identify the
principal
debtor and the surety as two distinct parties.
21.
It
was further held that if the second interpretation applied, the
suretyship contract would be formally valid.
22.
In
this case valid in the sense that the suretyship complied “with
the formal requirements in section 6 of the Act”
and that in
this case the facts constituted a sufficient basis for granting
rectification.
23.
In
the case of Fourlamel (Pty) Ltd v Maddison
1977 (1) SA 333
(A) at 345
A-D and Intercontinental Exports (Pty) Ltd v Fowles
1999 (2) SA 1045
(SCA), it was held that the word “terms” has been
construed to include the identification of three necessary parties,
being the creditor, the principal debtor, and the surety.
24.
The
enquiry therefore needs to be whether or not the document properly
identifies a creditor, a principal debtor, and a surety.
25.
In
my view the facts of the application involving the Plaintiff and the
Second Defendant are distinguishable from the Inventive
Judgment
where the names of the surety and the principal debtor were the same,
but not the names of a natural person.
26.
In
this matter the Second Defendant’s defence to the Plaintiff’s
claim is that the suretyship relied upon by the Plaintiff
in claim 2
did not satisfy the provisions of Section 6 of the General Law
Amendment Act 50 of 1956 (as amended) in as much as it
records that
the Second Defendant has bound himself as surety to the First
Defendant and not to the Plaintiff.
27.
Simply put, and on my reading of the
Judgment of Jafta JA in the Inventive Judgment and on a proper
interpretation, the present
suretyship fails to comply with the
provisions of Section 6 of the Act and here, as distinct from the
Inventive Labour Structuring
matter, -
a.
We
are not dealing with two natural persons;
b.
The
First Defendant and the Second Defendant in the matter were separate
legal entities, and in my view, a deed of suretyship did
not come
into force, and for the reasons set out above, and the matter should
therefore not proceed to a second leg where rectification
might be
considered.
28.
I
turn now to deal with the amendments to the Applicant’s
pleadings and being the withdrawal of an admission and an amendment
to his plea.
29.
In
this Court’s view, and as contemplated in Rule 28 (10) of the
Uniform Rules of Court, a court has an inherent discretion
at any
time before judgment to grant leave to a party to amend its pleadings
or documents.
30.
It
is further this Court’s view that the granting of any such
amendments in this matter is to restore the real issue between
the
parties, namely the enforceability of the suretyship discussed above.
31.
The
Applicant in his pleadings, and up to the amendments contemplated
herein, denied that a suretyship agreement was in place between
him
and the Respondent.
32.
In
this regard, it was necessary for the Applicant to amend his plea to
remedy circumstances that appeared to be inadvertent, and
not the
doing of the Applicant personally.
33.
This
was further required to respond to the Respondent’s amended
particulars of claim, which sought to introduce a new claim
of
rectification, and in an attempt to overcome what was an invalid deed
of suretyship, and necessitating the Applicant to amend
his plea.
34.
This
approach of the Applicant was not inconsistent with his past conduct,
and in my view not conduct introducing anything that
the Respondent
would have been unaware of, or conduct to be regarded as prejudicial,
and to reiterate, was required to restate
the legal issue between the
parties.
35.
Accordingly,
I confirm that the Applicant was entitled –
a.
To
be granted leave to withdraw the formal admissions from his plea
dated 17 May 2019 complained of by the Respondent in its Notice
of
Objection dated 28 January 2020; and
b.
That
the Applicant be granted leave to amend his plea dated 17 May 2019 in
accordance with the Applicant’s notice of intention
to amend
dated 23 January 2020.
36.
As
I have stated that the suretyship failed to pass the first stage of
the enquiry highlighted above, it is in my view invalid and
incapable
of rectification.
37.
I further confirm the order that the
Respondent pay the costs of the Application.
V
HARRISON
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
DELIVERED:
This Judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
Date
of hand down is deemed to be 21 June 2022
Counsel
for the Applicant:
J A van Rooyen
Instructed
by:
Attorney D E Bruwer
Counsel for the
Respondent:
M Cajee
Instructed by:
Farbridges,Wertheim Becker Attorneys
DATE OF HEARING:
13 October 2020
DATE OF ORDER OF COURT:
10
November 2020
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