Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 629South Africa
ABSA Home Loans Guarantee Company (RF) (PTY) LTD v Gramoney and Another (24054/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 629 (16 August 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## ABSA Home Loans Guarantee Company (RF) (PTY) LTD v Gramoney and Another (24054/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 629 (16 August 2022)
ABSA Home Loans Guarantee Company (RF) (PTY) LTD v Gramoney and Another (24054/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 629 (16 August 2022)
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sino date 16 August 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 24054/20
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
In the matter between:
ABSA HOME LOANS
GUARANTEE
COMPANY (RF) (PTY) LTD
First Plaintiff/Respondent
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Second Plaintiff/Respondent
And
GRAMONEY,
PARMESEN THANGAVELOO
First Defendant/Applicant
GRAMONEY,
SINDHA
Second Defendant/Applicant
JUDGMENT
Olivier, AJ:
Introduction &
background facts
[1]
The Applicants/Defendants bring this
application in terms of Rule 30 of the Uniform Rules of Court. Their
complaint relates to the
Plaintiffs’ particulars of claim. For
the sake of convenience, I refer to the parties as they are cited in
the action.
[2]
It is unnecessary to deal extensively with
the background facts.
[3]
The Defendants concluded a home loan
agreement with Sanlam Home Loans 101 (Pty) Ltd (“Sanlam 101”)
on 25 April 2006.
[4]
The loan was guaranteed with an indemnity
bond over the purchased property in favour of Sanlam Home Loan
Guarantee Company (Pty)
Ltd (“Sanlam Guarantee”).
[5]
Sanlam 101 and Sanlam Guarantee had
concluded an agreement on 5 July 2004 in terms of which Sanlam
Guarantee would, from time to
time, guarantee individual debtors’
indebtedness to Sanlam 101 against registration and execution of an
indemnity in favour
of Sanlam Guarantee. This would entitle Sanlam
101 to call on Sanlam Guarantee to make payment of the Defendants’
indebtedness
in the event of breach, in accordance with the terms of
the guarantee read with the loan agreement.
[6]
Sanlam 101 changed its name to ABSA Home
Loans 101 (Pty) Ltd (“ABSA 101”) on 1 October 2010. On 9
June 2014 ABSA 101
transferred, sold, ceded and assigned its home
loans business (including the loan agreement and indemnity bond of
the Defendants)
to ABSA Bank Limited (“ABSA) (the Second
Plaintiff). Sanlam Guarantee subsequently changed its name to ABSA
Home Loans Guarantee
Company (RF) (Pty) Ltd (“ABSA Guarantee”)
(the First Plaintiff).
[7]
At all material times ABSA managed, as
agent, the home loans business of Sanlam 101, and then of its
successor ABSA 101.
[8]
On 7 September 2020 the Plaintiffs issued
summons against the Defendants, claiming the amount of R 1 377
057.65, together with interest
thereon at a rate of 8.95% p.a. from
13 July 2020 to date of payment, as well as an order declaring the
property specially executable.
As at 12 July 2020 the Defendants were
almost 53 months in arrears.
[9]
The Defendants’ primary complaint is
that the Plaintiffs failed to attach to their particulars of claim,
proof of their compliance
with section 129 read with section 130 of
the National Credit Act 35 of 2005 (“the Act”),
specifically proof that the
required notice had “in fact”
been delivered to the Defendants. They made two further complaints in
their notice. Although
not formally withdrawn, they were not pursued
with any vigour or enthusiasm during oral argument.
[11]
The Defendants seek an order setting aside
the alleged irregular steps and ordering Plaintiffs to re-serve the
Section 129 notice
in compliance with the Act prior to taking any
further steps in these proceedings. In their heads of argument, they
phrase the
relief differently: staying the legal proceedings in the
main action until such time as Plaintiffs comply with the provisions
of
the Act; alternatively, the Defendants are afforded a period of 10
days from the date of the order to exercise their rights as
financially-distressed consumers in terms of section 129 of the Act.
Rule 30 of the Uniform
Rules of Court
[12]
Rule 30 is titled
Irregular
proceedings
. Its purpose was explained
recently by Sutherland DJP in
Hlophe v
Freedom under Law
:
The
Uniform Rules of Court prescribe the manner of presentation of
documents that serve the process of court. Sometimes practitioners
fail to satisfy these prescripts. Such failures are the subject
matter of Rule 30 which deals with ‘’irregular
proceedings’’
and what an aggrieved party may do about
the irregularities allegedly perpetuated by an adversary.
[1]
[13]
Similarly,
in
SA
Metropolitan v Louw
it
was stated that
rule
30 is there to remove any hindrance to the future conduct of
litigation caused by the non-observance of what the Rules of Court
intended.
[2]
Rule 30, therefore,
provides a mechanism for a party to proceedings who alleges that any
other party has taken an irregular step,
to apply to court to have
the step set aside.
[14]
There
are requirements to meet for a successful application: the alleged
irregular step by the respondent must be a step which advances
the
proceedings one stage nearer completion;
[3]
the applicant must not him- or herself have taken a further step in
the cause with knowledge of the irregularity; proof of prejudice
to
the applicant must be established;
[4]
and subrule (1) does not apply to omissions, but only to positive
steps or proceedings.
[5]
Importantly, rule 30 contemplates irregularities of form, not
substance.
[6]
Defendants’
notices
[15]
Defendants delivered a first Rule 30(1)
notice on 22 October 2020, setting out four causes of complaint. It
is unnecessary to deal
with them. Three of these were answered by
Plaintiffs amending their particulars of claim. Regarding the fourth
cause, non-compliance
with Section 129 of the Act, Plaintiffs
informed the Defendants in their reply that this was a matter for
trial, not a Rule 30
application.
[16]
On 22 January 2021 the Defendants delivered
three more notices: a second Rule 30(1) notice, a Rule 35(1) notice,
and a Rule 35(6)
notice. Plaintiffs’ attorneys replied by
letter dated 4 February 2021, in which they set out what they
considered to be defects
in the Defendants’ various notices;
they invited Defendants to withdraw the notices. Defendants
subsequently withdrew the
two Rule 35 notices (for discovery and
inspection of documents respectively), but not the Rule 30(1) notice.
The causes of complaint
were not removed, according to the
Defendants; consequently, they brought the present application
proceedings.
[17]
In the second Rule 30 notice Defendants
identified three causes, two of which had already been raised in the
first notice and remedied,
according to the Plaintiffs:
[17.1.]
First, that the standard mortgage
conditions, in which Defendants “requested” ABSA
Guarantee to guarantee their indebtedness
to ABSA, are unsigned.
Failure to attach the “signed requests” renders
Plaintiffs’ cause of action unsustainable,
according to
Defendants. This was the same complaint made by Defendants in their
first notice, which Plaintiffs addressed by an
amendment of their
particulars of claim. Should the Defendants dispute that the
guarantee was indeed signed, they may raise this
in their plea; it
would be a matter for evidence at trial, say Plaintiffs.
[17.2.]
Second, Plaintiffs have not attached the
Power of Attorney in terms of which the Defendants authorised the
execution and registration
of the mortgage bond in favour of the
First Plaintiff. In their founding affidavit to this application,
Defendants specifically
require Plaintiffs to furnish them with the
requested Power of Attorney. Plaintiffs submit that this is not a
primary fact of the
sort that is required to be pleaded. It is
evidence to show that the Defendants authorised registration of the
mortgage bond in
favour of ABSA Guarantee. Plaintiffs communicated to
Defendants that the document will be discovered under Rule 35 once
pleadings
have closed. Also, if not discovered under Rule 35(1),
Defendants can avail themselves of Rule 35(3) to call for the
document.
[17.3.]
Third, Defendants allege that the
Plaintiffs have not complied with the Act. Specifically, the
Defendants say that there is no proof
that the section 129(1) notice
was “in fact” delivered to them and that the documents
annexed by the Plaintiffs to
the particulars of claim — the
track and trace reports of the Post Office – are merely
“unconfirmed statements
obtained from an electronic website
platform”. They deny receiving the notices. The Defendants seem
to contend that proof
of actual delivery is required in terms of the
Act.
[18]
In their practice note and written heads of
argument the Defendants only dealt with the third cause of complaint.
The first two
causes of complaint were also not addressed in their
oral submissions and when asked by the Court whether they intended to
deal
with them, the Defendants did so only very briefly. Defendants
also did not consider the first and second causes of complaint in
their replying affidavit. The relief they claim is focused
specifically on Plaintiffs’ alleged non-compliance with the Act
and Defendants’ rights in terms of the Act.
[19]
At the start of his oral argument, Mr
D’Oliveira submitted that he understood Defendants to rely only
on the third cause of
complaint in these proceedings; the first two
complaints may be raised by them during the trial.
[20]
This was neither disputed nor corrected by
Mr Gramoney during his reply. Accordingly, I consider only the third
cause of complaint.
Plaintiffs’
submissions
[21]
Plaintiffs argue that the points were
erroneously taken. The application is fatally defective for two main
reasons: first, the complaints
relate to substance, not form; and
second, the Defendants took a further step on 22 January when they
delivered the rule 35 notices.
[22]
Plaintiffs
argue that Defendants do not distinguish properly between substantive
and procedural matters, and also not between
facta
probanda
and
facta
probantia
.
All of the causes of complaint, in particular the section 129(1)
notice complaint, are complaints that the Plaintiffs failed to
furnished evidence in support of their primary facts. A party is not
required to plead every piece of evidence necessary to prove
a fact;
only every fact which is necessary to be proved.
[7]
[23]
I shall deal first with the submission that
the Defendants had a taken a further step.
Rule 35 notices
[24]
A Rule 30 application may be brought only
where the Applicant, with knowledge of the irregularity, has not him-
or herself taken
a further step towards bringing the matter to
conclusion,
[25]
Steps
taken in preparation of trial, such as requesting particulars for
trial, or serving a notice to produce, and convening and
attending a
pretrial conference, are further steps in the cause.
[8]
[26]
Plaintiffs argue that the Defendants took a
further step when they delivered the rule 35(1) and 35(6) notices on
22 January 2021,
alongside the Rule 30(1) notice.
[27]
Rule 35(1) provides specifically that such
notice shall not be given before close of pleadings, except with the
leave of a Judge.
Rule 35(6) applies only in instances where a party
has already made discovery and the other party wants to inspect a
disclosed
document or tape recording.
[28]
The Rule 35 notices were patently
premature, as pleadings had not yet closed.
[29]
Delivering Rule 35(1) and 35(6) notices
would be a step in preparation of trial, as envisaged by Rule 30.
Their delivery would therefore
disqualify a party from availing
themselves of Rule 30; in my view, it constitutes an irregular step
itself.
[30]
Defendants must obviously have had
knowledge of the Plaintiffs’ alleged irregular step when they
delivered the Rule 35 notices.
That these notices were delivered
contemporaneously with the Rule 30 notice, and not at an earlier
time, makes no difference.
[31]
Plaintiffs’ attorneys gave detailed
responses to each of the notices, advising Defendants of their
defects and possibly irregular
steps. They afforded Defendants an
opportunity to withdraw the Rule 35 notices, while reserving their
right to approach the court
regarding the irregularity of the
notices. The Defendants acted sensibly and withdrew the Rule 35
notices.
[32]
This application was launched on the same
day as the notices’ withdrawal – 22 March 2022. In my
view the Rule 30 process
is initiated by delivering the notice to the
other party. It is at this first stage that Defendants should not
have taken a further
step. The subsequent withdrawal of the Rule 35
notices does not aid Defendants – they still took a further
step.
[33]
However, should I be wrong in finding that
the Defendants had taken a further step, it is of no major
consequence, considering my
attitude towards the main cause of
complaint, which I discuss in the next section.
Section 129 of the Act
[34]
There are two aspects to this complaint:
compliance with section 129 of the Act, and proof of compliance.
Defendants allege that
neither has been satisfied.
[35]
The
obligation imposed on the creditor is to draw the default to the
notice of the consumer in writing, by making the document available
to the consumer.
[9]
[36]
Defendants allege that there is no evidence
confirming that the notices were in fact delivered to them. They say
that the documents
annexed to Plaintiffs’ particulars of claim
are “unconfirmed statements obtained from an electronic website
platform”.
[37]
Plaintiffs submit that Defendants may plead
that either Plaintiffs failed to comply with their obligations under
sections 129 and
130 of the Act, or that Defendants did not receive
the notices, or both. Evidence may be led at trial on these points.
But, Plaintiffs
contend, Defendants are not entitled to raise it as a
defence to the action by way of a Rule 30 application.
[38]
The issue was addressed fully in argument.
It is unnecessary for me to make a finding. I consider the
submissions only to determine
if the complaint is one of substance,
not form.
[39]
Defendants
rely solely on
Sebola
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[10]
which preceded
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
by two years.
[11]
Both are
judgments of the Constitutional Court.
Kubyana
reflects the current law. It sets out clearly what a credit provider
needs to do to comply with section 129, in the case when delivery
occurs through the postal service. As argued by Plaintiffs, they must
show only that the notice was sent by prepaid registered
post to the
correct branch of the post office, that the post office sent a
notification to the Defendants, that a registered article
was
available for their collection, and that the registered article
reached the Defendants, which could be inferred from the post
office
having sent the notification.
[12]
[40]
Mhlantla AJ (as she then was) explains what
happens once the credit provider has produced the track and trace
report:
Once a
credit provider has produced the track and trace report indicating
that the s 129 notice was sent to the correct branch of
the Post
Office and has shown that a notification was sent to the consumer by
the Post Office, that credit provider will generally
have shown that
it has discharged its obligations under the Act to effect delivery.
The credit provider is at that stage entitled
to aver that it has
done what is necessary to ensure that the notice reached the
consumer. It then falls to the consumer to explain
why it is not
reasonable to expect the notice to have reached her attention if she
wishes to escape the consequences of that notice.
And it makes sense
for the consumer to bear this burden of rebutting the inference of
delivery, for the information regarding the
reasonableness of her
conduct generally lies solely within her knowledge. In the absence of
such an explanation the credit provider's
averment will stand.
[13]
[41]
This means that the Defendants may lead
evidence at trial to rebut the inference of delivery, by explaining
why it is not reasonable
to expect the notice to have reached their
attention.
[42]
Both
points are ones of substance, not form. Therefore, neither compliance
nor proof of compliance can be challenged under Rule
30. They are
governed by legislation, and unrelated to “the manner of
presentation of documents that serve the process of
court.”
[14]
It follows that the application must be dismissed on this ground. At
trial, the parties will have an opportunity to argue the merits,
should they so wish.
Costs
[43]
It
is trite that a court exercises its discretion when awarding costs.
This discretion is wide, but not unlimited; it must be exercised
judicially upon a consideration of all the facts. There are
established principles which guide a court, but they are not hard and
fast rules. As a rule of thumb, successful parties are entitled to
their costs.
[15]
[44]
Regrettably, it is becoming more prevalent
for successful parties to ask for costs on an attorney-and-client
scale, often without
providing justification. Attorney-and-client
costs are punitive in nature and should be the exception, not the
rule. However, where
the circumstances justify an attorney-and-client
costs order, the court should grant it.
[45]
Plaintiffs seek attorney-and-client costs
for 3 reasons: the underlying contract provides for it; Defendants
were pertinently informed
of Plaintiffs’ response to their Rule
30 notice in Plaintiffs’ letter of 4 February 2021, in which
the defects in their
notices were pointed out; and Defendants have
put Plaintiffs to the unnecessary trouble and expense of opposing
this application.
[46]
First Defendant, Mr Gramoney, represented
Defendants, who are lay persons. They find themselves in a
predicament. Unfortunately
for them, their decision to bring this
application was misguided. They persisted with the application
notwithstanding Plaintiffs’
attorneys’ advice to them
that a Rule 30 application was not the proper way to raise their
objections.
[47]
In terms of the agreement between the
parties, Defendants are liable for any legal costs, including tracing
costs and collection
commission on an attorney-and-client scale,
arising from default in terms of their obligations under the bond.
[48]
The Plaintiffs are awarded costs on an
attorney-and-client scale.
THE FOLLOWING ORDER
ISSUES:
a.
The application is dismissed.
b.
Defendants to pay Plaintiffs’ costs
on an attorney-and-client scale.
M
Olivier
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and/or parties’ representatives by email and by
upload
to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
16h00 on
16 August 2022.
Date of hearing: 25 May
2022
Date of judgment: 16
August 2022
On
behalf of applicants/defendants
: First
Defendant in person
On
behalf of respondents/plaintiffs
: M De
Oliveira
Instructed
by
: Tim du Toit Inc
[1]
Hlophe
v Freedom under Law
2022 (2) SA 523
(GJ) at para [11].
[2]
SA
Metropolitan v Louw
1981
(4) SA 329
O at 333G-H.
[3]
Market
Dynamics (Pty) Ltd t/a Brian Ferris v Grögor
1984 (1) SA 152
(W) at 153C.
[4]
De
Klerk v De Klerk
1986 (4) SA 424
(W) at 426I.
[5]
Jyoti
Structures Africa (Pty) Ltd v KRB Electrical Engineers; Masana
Mavuthani Electrical & Plumbing Services (Pty) Ltd
t/a KRB
Masana
2011 (3) SA 231
(GSJ) at 235.
[6]
Singh
v Vorkel
1947 (3) SA 400
(C) at 406;
Odendaal
v De Jager
1961 (4) SA 307
(O) at 310F–G.
[7]
See
eg
Van
der Merwe v Starbuck NO
2019
JDR
0408 (GP), a recent decision of this division, and authorities cited
there.
[8]
Klein
v Klein
1993 (2) SA 648 (BG).
[9]
See
sections 129 & 65(2) of the Act.
[10]
2012
(5) SA 142 (CC).
[11]
2014
(3) SA 56 (CC).
[12]
Ibid
at para [54].
[13]
Ibid
at para [53].
[14]
See
para [12] in the text above.
[15]
Fripp
v Gibbon & Co
1913 AD 354
,
and more recently
Griessel
NO v De Kock
2019 (5) SA 396
(SCA) at para [24].
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