Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 519South Africa
Wesbank, A Division Of Firstrand Bank Ltd v PSG Haulers CC (38510/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 519 (3 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 August 2022
Headnotes
judgment wherein the relief sought is for the return to the Applicant of certain 2018 Scania motor vehicle.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Wesbank, A Division Of Firstrand Bank Ltd v PSG Haulers CC (38510/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 519 (3 August 2022)
Wesbank, A Division Of Firstrand Bank Ltd v PSG Haulers CC (38510/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 519 (3 August 2022)
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sino date 3 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO. 38510/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
3 August 2022
In
the matter between:
WESBANK,
A DIVISION OF FIRSTRAND BANK
LTD
Applicant
and
PSG
HAULERS
CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NOCHUMSOHN
AJ
1.
This is an opposed
application for summary judgment wherein the relief sought is for the
return to the Applicant of certain 2018
Scania motor vehicle.
2.
On 7 June 2018, the
parties entered into an Agreement under which the said Scania motor
vehicle was purchased by the Respondent
from the Applicant for R1 932
000.00. The Respondent would pay an initial deposit of R193 200.00.
The remaining capital balance
and finance charges were payable in
monthly instalments over a period of sixty months. The Applicant
would remain the owner of
the Scania until the Respondent had paid
all of the amounts due under the Agreement.
3.
The Scania was
delivered to the Respondent, who failed to maintain payments. At time
of issue of the summons, Respondent was in
arrears in the amount of
R198 616.48. On 16 November 2020, the full outstanding balance
amounted to R1 186 915.04.
4.
Arising out of the
Respondent’s breach, the Applicant cancelled the Agreement in
the summons.
5.
The Applicant
pleaded that under section 4(1)(a)(i) of the National Credit Act, the
act was not applicable inasmuch as the Respondent
is a juristic
person with a turnover in excess of R1 000 000.00, coupled with the
Agreement being “
a
large agreement”
as
contemplated in the act. In response, the Respondent pleaded that
these allegations raise arguable points of law and challenged
the
Applicant to prove such allegations. Pertinent to note, the
Respondent failed to deny in the Plea that its turnover did not
exceed R1 000 000.00 or that the Agreement was not a large
agreement as foreshadowed in the National Credit Act. The
Plea is no
more than a bald denial of liability and puts the Applicant to the
proof of the allegations made in the summons.
6.
In the Affidavit
resisting Summary Judgment, the Respondent avers that “
it
attempted”
to pay the arrears and begged the indulgence of the court to pay off
the arrears. Barring the attachment of proofs of payment,
there is no
evidence of the attempts. No facts are set out as to what amounts
were paid, when, on account of the arrears. Disturbing
to note,
Counsel for the applicant, Adv Leon Peter, pointed out in argument
that the same proofs of payment attached to the answering
affidavit
have been attached by the same respondent in some six other cases
before this court. My response to this was that such
evidence is not
before me, but I suggested that these cases all be collated and
presented to the Deputy Judge President for the
allocation of case
management or the taking of any other further steps.
7.
Other than to allege
in its opposing Affidavit that the Respondent was severely afflicted
by the Disaster Management Act and unable
to trade as a result of the
lockdown, no other defences are raised. Whilst the Respondent set out
at great lengths its position,
and cash flow hardships arising out of
the non-payment of a deposit (which would have alleviated its
problems) from the sale of
its gold dump mine, it does not take the
court into its confidence by explaining how its precarious financial
position has been
or will be alleviated so as to enable it to pay the
Applicant. There is a mere bland allegation to the effect that the
Respondent
has “
turned
the tide and will be able to honour its contractual obligations going
forward”.
One
would have at least expected the Respondent to set out its business
plan, its projected cash flows in a manner sufficiently
persuasive to
lead this Honourable Court to the conclusion that the Respondent
would indeed be in a position to meet the debt.
In this sense, the
Affidavit resisting Summary Judgment is equally bland and lacking in
substance to that of the Plea.
8.
In raising a defence
of
vis major
arising out of
the national lockdown, the Respondent does not take the court into
its confidence by offering any evidence as to
the contracts which it
had on hand immediately preceding the lockdown, its ability to trade
immediately preceding the lockdown,
its income and expenditure
immediately preceding the lockdown, what arrangements it was able to
make with its creditors arising
out of the lockdown. There is no
evidence of its budget immediately preceding the lockdown, the
revision of its budget as a result
of the lockdown, its plans for
future trading at a time after the lockdown. Neither is there any
evidence of when the Respondent
recommenced trading, what
transactions it undertook, how its income and expenditure improved or
deteriorated, all of which was
to be expected in an Affidavit
resisting Summary Judgment. It is simply insufficient for a debtor to
baldly allege that it was
incapable of trading arising out of the
lockdown. Full particularity of its financial position, before,
during and after the lockdown
ought to have been disclosed.
9.
Absent such
evidence, it is not competent for a court to find that performance
had become objectively impossible, with the result
that the
principles raised both in argument and in the Respondent’s
Heads of Argument pertaining to impossibility of performance,
find no
application. In order to apply such principles, there must at least
be a semblance of evidence placed before a court beyond
a bald
allegation that an entity was incapable of trading as a product of
lockdown.
10.
There is no evidence
relating to either the possession or use of the Scania during the
lockdown. The court is thus left in a vacuum,
not knowing whether or
not the Scania had been used, for what purpose it had been used, or
what benefit had been derived by the
Respondent from its use. Again,
such evidence could and should have been tendered in the affidavit
opposing summary judgement.
11.
In its Heads of
Argument, the Respondent placed much reliance upon a term in the
contract to the effect that should a deterioration
in the buyer’s
financial circumstances occur, the seller
would
have the right
{
my emphasis
}
to propose varied terms for the remaining duration. In the event of
the buyer refusing such terms within thirty days of the proposal,
all
amounts unpaid would fall due.
12.
The argument
presented was that the aforesaid term was peremptory. This was a
reason advanced by the Respondent, to the effect that
the Applicant
was not entitled to cancel the Agreement. Whilst such point, is one
of law, which need not have been pleaded or raised
in the Affidavit
resisting Summary Judgment (and it was not), one would have at least
expected evidence in the opposing Affidavit
of all attempts on the
Respondent’s part to negotiate meaningfully, or at all with the
Applicant.
13.
There is not a
single shred of evidence indicating that any form of negotiation took
place under which the Respondent explained
its financial position, in
detail to the Applicant, met with the Applicant or requested the
Applicant to exercise its rights under
the clause in question to make
a proposal for varied terms. It is to be borne in mind that the
clause in question is not peremptory
in nature.
14.
From the plain
language used, the clause confers a right upon the Applicant to
propose varied terms and not an obligation upon the
Applicant to
propose varied terms. Thus, this argument cannot pass muster.
15.
In its defence, the
Respondent placed reliance upon
Barkhuizen
v Napier 2007 (5) SA323 (CC).
16.
Barkhuizen sheds
light on substantive fairness of a contract, or contractual clauses
and approaches the issue out of considerations
of public policy. In
order to meaningfully engage with such constitutional principles, to
ascertain whether they ought to be applied
to the facts
in
casu,
there must
at least be evidence of some steps on the part of the Respondent to
having engaged with the Applicant, and have requested
the Applicant
to invoke the very clause which the Respondent now, in argument,
accuses the Applicant of violating. No such evidence
exists.
17.
Whilst the
Respondent correctly raised in its Heads of Argument that a
contractual party must act in good faith, as foreshadowed
in
Everfresh Market
Virgina (Pty) Ltd v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd 2012 (1) (SA) 256
(CC),
there is
no evidence to support its contention that the Applicant acted in bad
faith.
18.
Finally, the
Respondent emphasised in its Heads of Argument that the cancellation
should have been referred to the National Credit
Regulator in
accordance with sections 139, 140 and 141 of the National Credit Act.
Such submission was based upon the court having
insufficient
information to rule upon whether or not the National Credit Act was
applicable to the Agreement.
19.
I have already
mentioned that there was a failure on the part of the Respondent to
have denied the allegation in the summons to
the effect that the
National Credit Act did not find application. More importantly, no
such denial is made in the Affidavit resisting
summary judgment.
Again, the court cannot place any reliance upon submissions made,
absent any evidence to support such submissions.
Generally, counsel
should be constrained not to make submissions which are incapable of
being substantiated against the evidence
presented.
20.
It is not competent
to call upon the court to find that the Agreement is governed by the
National Credit Act in an environment where
there is an allegation in
the summons that the act is inapplicable. Such allegation is not
denied in the Plea, nor in the Affidavit
resisting Summary Judgment.
Absent such denials, the conclusion to draw is that the pleaded facts
that the Respondent’s turnover
exceeds R1000 000.00, and that
the Agreement is “
a
large agreement”,
as
foreshadowed under the National Credit Act, must be accepted to be
the prevailing position. Thus, there is no scope for a referral
to
the National Credit Regulator for investigation.
21.
Having regard to the
aforegoing, I find that there is no defence to the claim and the
Applicant is entitled to Summary Judgment,
as sought. Thus, I make
the following Order:
21.1.
The Respondent is to
return to the Applicant the 2018 Scania G460 CA6X4MSZ T/T C/C with
engine number 9BSG6X40003924205 and chassis
number DC13106L018313864;
21.2.
The Respondent is to
pay the Applicant’s costs of the action, including the costs of
this opposed application for summary
judgment, on the scale between
party and party.
21.3.
The application is
postponed
sine
die
for purposes
of the Applicant pursuing its claim for damages, and for the filing
of supplemented papers in respect of the quantification
thereof.
NOCHUMSOHN,
G
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
On
behalf of Applicant: Advocate
Leon Peter (leonpeterc@gmail.com)
Instructed
by: Rossouws
Lesie Inc (
phelisaj@rossouws.co.za
)
On
behalf of the Respondent:
Instructed
by: Matthews
Siyeko (
matthews@mabuzas.co.za
)
Date
of Hearing: 3
August 2022
Date
of Judgment: 3
August 2022
This
judgment was Authored by Nochumsohn AJ and is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties/their Legal
representatives
by email and uploading to the electronic file of this
matter on caselines. The date of this Judgment is deemed to be 3
August 2022.
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