Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 595South Africa
WesBank, a division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Maseko and Another (47971/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 595 (22 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 August 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 595
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## WesBank, a division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Maseko and Another (47971/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 595 (22 August 2022)
WesBank, a division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Maseko and Another (47971/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 595 (22 August 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_595.html
sino date 22 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO.: 47971/2017
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
NO
22
August 2022
In
the matter between:
WESBANK,
a division of FIRSTRAND BANK LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
MASEKO:
SITEMELA ESSAU
First Defendant
MASEKO:
MALETSATSI
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
FORD
AJ
:
Introduction
[1]
On 12 August 2017, First Rand Bank t/a Wesbank (“the
plaintiff”)
instituted action against Mr. Sitemela Essau Maseko
(‘the first defendant”) in which it sought an order
confirming
the cancellation of an instalment sale agreement entered
into between the plaintiff and the first defendant on 17 March 2017,
the
return of a 2007 BMW X5 3.0D A/T motor vehicle (“the
vehicle”) and ancillary relief. The first defendant and his
daughter,
Ms. Maletsatsi Maseko (“the second defendant”)
in turn instituted two counterclaims in respect of which they
respectively
sought:
(a)
Payment of an amount of R6603.36 (six thousand six hundred and three
rand, thirty-six cents);
(b)
An order declaring the second defendant to be the common law owner
and titleholder of the
vehicle in accordance with the Regulations
under Section 4 of the National Road Traffic Act, 93 of 1996;
(c)
An order directing the plaintiff to restore the second defendant’s
status as registered
title holder.
[2]
This matter concerns the following controversy. The first defendant
approached
Autofin for finance. Autofin agreed to acquire finance for
the first defendant by having him sell his vehicle to e-Motion Cars
and buying it back from e-Motion Cars by way of a credit agreement
issued in favour of the first defendant (for the vehicle) by
the
plaintiff, all the while the first defendant retains ownership of the
vehicle.
[3]
The first and second defendants claim, as part of their defence, that
the manner in which the aforementioned transactions were concluded
was unlawful, alternatively, fraudulent, alternatively reckless
and
that the ultimate transfer of the vehicle to the plaintiff is
invalid. The questions emanating from the issues raised by the
defendants, and which this court will answer are essentially the
following:
(a)
Whether the first or second defendant was the owner of the vehicle at
the time the first
defendant sold the vehicle to Africa Spirit
Trading 208 (Pty) Ltd T/A e-Motion Cars (“e-Motion Cars”).
(b)
If the second defendant was the registered owner, whether the first
defendant had the requisite
authority to enter into an agreement to
sell the vehicle to e-Motion cars.
(c)
Whether the sale and subsequent financing of the vehicle was lawful,
having regard to the
fact that the second defendant, on her version,
was unaware of such transactions.
(d)
Whether the first defendant knew about the sale of the vehicle to
e-Motion Cars and the
subsequent purchasing of the vehicle from
e-Motion Cars.
(e)
Whether the plaintiff knew that a sale was concluded between the
first defendant and e-Motion
Cars, prior to it issuing finance in
favour of the first defendant for the vehicle.
(f)
Whether the first defendant was duped into concluding an instalment
sale agreement
by means of a fraud perpetrated by third parties or an
error on his part.
(g)
Whether the plaintiff, in advancing credit to the first defendant in
respect of the credit
agreement issued by the plaintiff over the
vehicle, was reckless in the sense contemplated in the
National
Credit Act, 34 of 2005
.
The
parties
[4]
The plaintiff is Wesbank, a Division of Firstrand Bank Ltd, a credit
provider
as defined in the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
. The first
defendant is Mr. Sitemela Essau Maseko, a self-employed businessman,
whom the plaintiff concluded a credit agreement
with. The second
defendant is Ms. Maletsatsi Maseko, the daughter of the first
defendant who was the registered owner of the vehicle
when the
vehicle was sold by the first defendant to e-Motion Cars.
The
evidence
[5]
The first defendant testified that in approximately 2012/2013, he was
introduced to a certain Mr. Mathabate (“Mathabate”) by a
friend of his. Mathabate was involved in the buying and selling
of
residential plots. Mathabate later visited the first defendant at his
home and advised the first defendant that there was a
stand for sale
somewhere in Johannesburg, which he (Mathabate) wished to acquire.
Mathabate did not have sufficient funds to acquire
the property and
requested the first defendant to provide him with a loan to do so.
The first defendant loaned Mathabate an amount
of R250 000.00 to
acquire the property. Unable to repay the loan, Mathabate approached
the first defendant and, in order to
offset a portion of the loan,
offered to transfer ownership of his (Mathabate’s) vehicle to
the first defendant. Mathabate
undertook to pay the first defendant
the remaining balance when he was able to do so.
[6]
The vehicle was then delivered to the first defendant. Since then,
the
vehicle has always remained in the first defendant’s
exclusive possession. The first defendant testified that he used the
vehicle over weekends but that he drove a more practical bakkie
during the week to cart his wares about.
[7]
Upon taking delivery of the vehicle, the first defendant advised the
second
defendant, his daughter from a previous relationship, that it
was his gift to her. He testified that in the event that he passed
on, he wanted her to have something of his. Consistent with this, he
arranged to have the vehicle registered in her name. Under
cross-examination, he conceded that the same result could have been
achieved by way of a testamentary disposition.
[8]
The second defendant never took possession of the vehicle which,
despite
the first defendant’s promise and his registration of
the vehicle in her name, at all times remained with the first
defendant.
The second defendant testified that she resided in
Boksburg and made use of a lift-club to and from work. She did not
reside with
the first defendant, who lived in Meyersdal.
[9]
In March 2017, the first defendant’s business encountered
unexpected
cashflow difficulties which he ascribes to the fierce
competition his business encountered, primarily on account of foreign
traders
significantly underselling products. The first defendant
began exploring ways to address the cashflow problems. While doing so
he came upon an advert offering assistance with loans. He telephoned
the number provided in the advertisement and spoke to a certain
Mr.
Michael Basson (“Basson”).
[10]
The first defendant and Basson arranged to meet to discuss a loan.
Basson was employed
by Autofin Assist (Pty) Ltd (“Autofin”).
According to Basson, he explained to the first defendant that in
order to
secure a loan for him, the first defendant had to complete a
loan application form, submit the vehicle’s license
registration
forms, provide proof of residence and furnish Basson
with bank statements. It seems that what Basson had in mind was that
Autofin
would approach the plaintiff on behalf of the first
defendant. The first defendant would sell the vehicle to a motor
vehicle dealership,
who would in turn sell the vehicle to the
plaintiff and the first defendant would then purchase the vehicle
back from the plaintiff,
via the dealership, by way of an instalment
sale agreement. Upon payment of the final instalment, ownership would
transfer back
to the first defendant.
[11]
The first defendant completed most of the information on the Autofin
loan application.
He says that when doing so, he was blissfully
unaware of the true import of the application form and the
arrangement. He did not
understand that he was purporting to sell the
vehicle to a motor dealership and that he would buy it back from that
dealership
by way of finance issued in his favour by the plaintiff.
Nor did he appreciate that the amount he received was in fact the
purchase
price on the vehicle. He understood it to be a loan.
[12]
Basson completed the remaining information in the Autofin application
form. This included
information about the selling price of the
vehicle, the M&M Code, the odometer reading, the service fee, the
license and registration
details, and the banking details of the
first defendant. The first defendant explained that his bank details
had been gleaned from
the bank statement that he provided to Basson.
[13]
The second defendant testified that the first defendant contacted her
and advised her that
he was applying for a loan with Autofin and that
they required the vehicle registration papers, which, so she said,
was security
for the loan he was applying for.
[14]
From the documents presented to the court, it is evident that the
meetings between the
first defendant and Basson took place on 6 and 7
March 2017. On 6 March 2017, a memorandum of agreement setting out
the manner
in which Autofin will assist the first defendant to obtain
finance and on 7 March 2017, the Autofin finance application was
completed.
The first defendant confirmed his signature in respect of
some documents and disputed it in other respects. He confirmed
however
that the manuscript entries appearing on the documents were
his. I have carefully considered the signatures and I am satisfied
that the disputed signatures are in fact those of the first
defendant.
[15]
The memorandum of agreement and the Autofin application for finance,
made it clear that
the item forming the subject of the loan and in
respect of which financing is to be arranged is the BMW. The finance
amount to
be arranged for the first defendant, before deducting the
Autofin fees, was an agreed amount of R100 000.00. The
memorandum
specifically directed that:
“
The client
understands and agrees that if this application is successful the
vehicle will be registered into the client’s
name and into the
banks(sic) name that will facilitate the loan. The motor vehicle will
be security for this loan in favour of
the bank”
[1]
The
bank account into which the payment for the loan was to be effected,
is the first defendant’s banking account.
[16]
On 9 March 2017, having completed the application for finance, Basson
emailed the entire
application, with supporting documents, to Mr.
Hugo Kriel (“Kriel”) a Finance and Insurance officer from
EJS Trading
and Sourcing CC (“EJS”). Kriel explained to
the first defendant that EJS had an agreement with Basson to source
leads
for customers and that EJS would in turn source financing for
the customer. He explained that EJS worked with various financing
houses and that they approached the plaintiff for financing in
respect of the vehicle. The necessary forms were prepared and signed
by the first defendant on 17 March 2017. He explained that the first
defendant specified acceptance of the warranty product and
also
applied for insurance cover with MiWay Insurance. The plaintiff
confirmed that the finance application submitted by
EJS on behalf of
the first defendant was approved. On the same day, e-Motion Cars
invoiced the plaintiff in an amount of R112 350.00
in respect of
the vehicle that the first defendant on the plaintiff’s
version, sold to e-Motion Cars, after having Dealer
Stocked the
vehicle.
[17]
On 24 March 2017, seven days after the application for finance, the
first defendant received
payment for the vehicle in the amount of
R88,345.00 being the amount for what the first defendant understood
was the payment for
the loan and the plaintiff regards as the cash
amount for the sale of the vehicle less fees payable to Autofin, a
deposit of R10,000.00
and license and registration fee of R1,500.00.
The invoice in respect of the aforementioned transaction, namely the
sale of the
vehicle from the first defendant to e-Motion Cars, is
dated 22 March 2017.
[18]
The first defendant was unable to meet the monthly instalments in
terms of the credit agreement.
On 5 June 2017, he applied for debt
review with National Debt Counsellors (“NDC”). NDC
submitted a debt restructuring
proposal to various creditors
including the plaintiff, on behalf of the first defendant, in respect
of a debt review plan. The
plaintiff, as explained by Ms. Rene
Moonsamy (“Moonsamy”), accepted the proposal after
issuing a counter offer which
NDC considered reasonable. Pursuant
thereto, the first defendant made some payments and missed a couple
of payments. The first
defendant sought to dispute the signatures on
the documents and the manner in which the signatures were procured. I
found no merit
whatsoever in those protestations.
[19]
On 5 October 2017, NDC applied to the Magistrates Court for an order
confirming the debt
review process in terms of
section 85
and
87
of
the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
. This application was however
withdrawn on account of the first defendant’s apparent failure
to have filed a confirmatory
affidavit in support of the application,
in time. The first defendant prepared a memo explaining his inability
to honour the instalment
for December 2017. He claimed that he had
just moved into a new apartment and had to pay for his relocation and
rent.
[20]
The plaintiff had in the interim terminated the debt review process,
ostensibly on grounds
that the first defendant was unable to keep up
with the payment arrangements. On 21 February 2018, a member of the
NDC team, a
certain Cherilyn, contacted the plaintiff. She spoke to a
certain Caroline working in the plaintiff’s call centre. The
first
defendant participated in the call. Caroline explained to
Cherilyn that the plaintiff was not prepared to consider any
arrangement
other than for the first defendant to settle the full
outstanding balance on the account.
[21]
On 23 February 2018, the first defendant contacted the plaintiff
himself. He enquired why
the debt review was cancelled. He then
requested whether there was a way in which he could pay off the debt
but was advised that
he needs to pay the full outstanding balance.
Only towards the end of that conversation did the first defendant
request a copy
of the contract (the credit agreement).
[22]
In response to the first defendant’s claim that the manner in
which credit was granted
to him was reckless, the plaintiff called
Mr. Ben Jonker, from the plaintiff’s specialist collections
department. Mr Jonker
confirmed that the plaintiff considered the
credit application and, having regard to the first defendant’s
declaration of
income and expenses, was satisfied that the first
defendant was indeed credit worthy. He concluded that on the strength
of the
information at the plaintiff’s disposal, he was
satisfied that credit was not granted recklessly, as claimed by the
first
defendant. He conceded that the plaintiff was not aware of the
transactions between the first defendant and e-Motion Cars and that
the plaintiff generally would not finance a deal that is based on a
“re-financing scheme”. He stated that when the
first
defendant’s debt review process was terminated, the plaintiff
instituted action for the return of the vehicle.
Analysis
[23]
Generally, ownership in a thing is transferred by delivery of the
thing coupled with an
intention to transfer ownership. Delivery may
be actual (
traditio vera
) but is more often constructive
(
traditio ficta
), in the sense that our law recognises other
forms of delivery that do not entail actual delivery of the thing but
is regarded
as sufficient to constitute the element of delivery.
There are various forms of constructive delivery. These include
inter
alia
clavium traditio
,
traditio brevi manu
(literally, delivery with the short hand),
constitutum
possessorium
and attornment. There are others which are, for
present purposes, not entirely relevant to the current controversy.
[24]
Clavium traditio
entails the delivery not
of the actual object of the transfer but of another thing which is
merely an instrument by which transferee
is able to exercise control
over the thing intended to be transferred. In
Unitrans
Rally Motors
[2]
Fischer AJ, dealing with a claim for transfer of ownership based on
estoppel said:
‘
[11] I am of the
opinion that, if regard be had to not only the manner in which
applicant dealt with Kok, but, in addition thereto,
the extent to
which Kok was entrusted with the
indicia
of
dominium
or
jus
disponendi
,
being the vehicle, its ignition keys, the certificate of registration
and the motor-vehicle licence and licence disc, evidencing
that the
vehicle had been transferred into the name of Kok, it must be
accepted that applicant had, as such, provided Kok with
all the
'scenic apparatus' with which Kok was able to represent to the
respondent that he was entitled to dispose of the vehicle,
and that
respondent was, as such, entitled to purchase same from him.’
[25]
The learned Judge regarded the ignition keys, certificate of
registration, motor-vehicle
licence and licence disk as the
instrument (‘scenic apparatus’) by which it enabled the
transferee to exercise control
over the vehicle.
[26]
Transfer of ownership
pursuant to
traditio
brevi manu
occurs
when the transferee is already in possession of the thing but at the
time holds the thing other than as owner.
Traditio
brevi manu
takes
place when the possessor of the thing and the owner change their
intention with regard to the ownership of the thing so that
the
possessor now intends to hold as owner. Delivery is constructive
because the possessor is already in possession when he or
she
acquires ownership. Examples of this form of delivery are to be found
under certain credit agreements (usually involving the
sale of motor
vehicles). In this example, a client seeking to purchase a motor
vehicle from a car dealership will approach a bank
to finance his
purchase of the vehicle. The bank agrees to provide the client with a
loan to purchase the vehicle from the dealer
on the understanding
that it (the bank) will lend the money to the client by paying the
finance amount to the dealer (who is the
owner) as the purchase
price. As part of the agreement between the bank and the client, it
is agreed that the bank will retain
ownership until the final
instalment is made. The vehicle is then delivered by the dealer to
the client who takes possession thereof
with the intention of holding
the vehicle on behalf of the bank. Once the final instalment is made,
ownership then transfers to
the client.
[3]
[27]
In the case of
constitutum possessorium
the transfer of
ownership takes place by means of a change of intention. The thing
remains in the possession of the previous owner
with the only
difference being that the previous owner changes his intention from
an intention to own and hold on his own behalf,
to an intention to
transfer ownership to another and then hold on behalf of the new
owner. This form of constructive delivery contains
obvious dangers
owing to the fact that e
x facie
, there appears to be no
obvious external manifestation of the change in intention. This type
of arrangement evinces a real risk
that third parties may be duped by
a simulated transaction.
[28]
In the case of attornment, the possessor intends to hold the thing on
behalf of one person
but then concludes an arrangement in terms of
which the possessor intends to hold on behalf of another person.
[29]
It is trite that ownership can, as a general rule, only be
transferred by a person who
is himself or herself the owner. This is,
of course, subject to the application of the doctrine of estoppel,
where the owner may
in certain circumstances be estopped from
asserting ownership.
[30]
The starting point in the present matter, is for the court to
determine whether the second
defendant acquired ownership. If she
did, then ownership could only be transferred by the first defendant
if he was authorised
by the second defendant to do so or if the
second defendant was estopped from denying his authority to do so.
[31]
The questions, which I referred to above, will be answered as part of
the analysis of the
evidence. The first issue which this court is
required to determine is the ownership of the vehicle at the time
when the first
defendant entered into agreements about that vehicle
with third parties. The second defendant claims that she was the
registered
owner of the vehicle and did not sell or gave permission
for the vehicle to be sold to a third party. The plaintiff contends
that
at all material times the first defendant was the owner of the
vehicle and that ownership, despite the vehicle being registered
in
the second defendant’s name, never passed to the second
defendant. What the plaintiff’s counsel was in effect arguing
was that the mere registration into the name of a person, does not
constitute ownership.
[32]
From the established facts, it is clear that the vehicle was never
actually
delivered to the second defendant. This leaves the
question, whether there was
constructive
delivery. Although
the first defendant informed her of the gift and continued to
register the vehicle into the second defendant’s
name, delivery
of the vehicle never took place, nor was the vehicle delivered in any
other constructive form of delivery.
[33]
In
Ronel
Noleen Smit v Calvin Kleinhans
[4]
the Supreme Court of Appeal had occasion to deal with ownership being
based exclusively on registration papers of a vehicle. The
court
agreed with the High Court’s reasoning that Ms. Smit's reliance
on the National Road Traffic Act 93 of 1996 (NRTA),
for claiming
ownership, was misplaced for she was an 'owner' purely for purposes
of the NRTA and not an owner in the conventional
sense in terms of
the common law. In support of the aforementioned conclusion the High
Court relied on various decisions of the
SCA
[5]
and the decision in
Goudini
Chrome (Pty) Ltd v MCC Contracts (Pty) Ltd
[6]
.
In the
Smith
case the court
specifically held, with reference to ownership claimed in respect of
the NRTA provision:
Accordingly, Ms Smit's
reliance on the motor vehicle licence issued in her name to prove
that she is the owner of the vehicle is
misplaced. Her assertion that
she was the owner as defined in s 1 of the NRTA7 does not assist her.
Ownership in terms of the NRTA
is confined only to the purposes of
the NRTA and whatever else is regulated by the NRTA”
[7]
.
[34]
What the above authority
clearly suggests is that the registration of a vehicle into a
person’s name does not in and of itself
vest that person with
ownership
[8]
.
[35]
Section 1
of the
National
Road Traffic Act
[9
] states that
‘owner’ in relation to a vehicle, means:
(a)
the person who has the right to the use and enjoyment of a vehicle in
terms of the common
law or a contractual agreement with the title
holder of such vehicle;
(b)
any person referred to in paragraph (a), for any period during which
such person has failed
to return that vehicle to the holder in
accordance with the contractual agreement referred to in paragraph
(a); or
(c)
a motor dealer who is in possession of a vehicle for the purpose of
sale, and who is licensed
as such or obliged to be licensed in
accordance with the regulations made under
section 4
, and “owned”
or any like word has a corresponding meaning.
Whereas
“title holder”, in relation to a vehicle means that:
(a)
The person who has to give permission for the alienation of the
vehicle in terms of a contractual
agreement with the owner of such
vehicle; or
(b)
The person who has the right to alienate the vehicle in terms of the
common law, and who
is registered as such in accordance with the
regulations under
section 4.
[36]
In
Marks
& Lamb Classic Cars CC v Kona
,
Yacoob AJ (as she then was) dealt with the question of ownership as
it relates to a certificate of registration. She held as follows
[10]
:
“
The
possession of the registration papers is
prima
facie
proof
of ownership. However, the possession of papers is not conclusive
proof of ownership. A motor vehicle is not immovable property,
the
sale and transfer of which is governed by statute. There is no
requirement that the change of ownership of a motor vehicle
be
registered for transfer to take place.
The only statutory
requirement regarding motor vehicles is that they be registered and
licenced, in terms of the
National
Road Traffic Act,
93
of 1996
. This does not regulate the transfer of ownership of
motor vehicles. The definitions of "owner" and "title
holder"
in the
National
Road Traffic Act make
this clear - both refer o rights in terms
of contract and the common law.”
[37]
The requirements to
effect a valid transfer of ownership of movables was further analysed
in
Air-Kel
(Edms) Bpk h/a Merkel Motors v Bodenstein en ‘n Ander
[11]
where Jansen JA held as follows:
“
Blote ooreenkoms
kan dus nie eiendomsreg oordra nie – traditio (oorhandiging)
moet ook geskied; en omgekeerd, blote oorhandiging
is ook nie
voldoende nie – dit moet gepaard gaan met ‘n ooreenkoms
tussen oorhandiger en ontvanger dat daarmee eiendomsreg
gegee en
geneem word.”
[38]
In respect of movable
property, ownership in movable property is transferred upon delivery
of the
res
coupled with either
payment of the purchase price, or the provision of security, or the
giving of credit. In
Trust
Bank van Afrika Bpk v Western Bank Beperk
&
Andere
NNO
[12]
,
the
court found that ownership of a thing only passes where the owner
delivers it to another with the intention of transferring
ownership
and the other takes the thing with the intention of acquiring
ownership.
[39]
The remarks by Milne JA
in Concor Construction (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Santambank Ltd
[13]
are equally insightful:
“
In
Lendalease
Finance (Pty) Ltd v Corporacion de Mercadeo Agricola and Others
1976 (4) SA 464
(A) at
489H it was held that ‘…ownership cannot pass by virtue
of the contract of sale alone: there must, in addition,
be at least a
proper delivery to the purchaser of the contract goods…”
[40]
I agree with Mr. Bruwer, the evidence as to who the common law owner
of the vehicle was
at the point when the first defendant met with
Basson, in March 2017, clearly points to the first defendant as the
owner of the
vehicle. He took delivery of the vehicle from Mathabate,
the vehicle was in his possession and control at all times and he
used
the vehicle exclusively. The second defendant never took
ownership of the vehicle. The second defendant, in order to prove
ownership
of the vehicle, had to do more than merely referring to a
certificate of registration to claim ownership. She failed to do so.
Accordingly, the counterclaim, in which she sought an order declaring
herself to be the common law owner and titleholder of the
vehicle,
must fail.
[41]
In light of the finding above, it follows that the first defendant
had the requisite authority
deal with the vehicle in any manner he
chose to do. The plaintiff’s case is that the first defendant
sold his vehicle to
e-Motion Cars whereas the first defendant on the
other hand claims that he never sold the vehicle but merely sought to
handover
the registration and licensing papers, in lieu of security
for the loan he made from Autofin. I will address the contrasting
versions
later herein, save to state that in whatsoever manner the
first defendant dealt with the vehicle, he could do so by virtue of
the
fact that he, and not the second defendant, was in fact the true
owner of the vehicle.
[42]
In order to properly follow the evidentiary proposition on which the
plaintiff’s
claim against the first defendant is based, it is
important to follow a comprehensive timeline of events:
(a)
Early in March 2017, the first defendant contacted Basson enquiring
about a loan;
(b)
On 6 and 8 March 2017, the plaintiff met with Basson and completed a
number of documents
in relation to an application for finance
pertaining to the vehicle the first defendant was the owner of;
(c)
On 9 March 2017, Basson
emails Kriel the information pertaining to the first defendant’s
application for finance
[14]
;
(d)
On 14 March 2017, the
first defendant applies for insurance in respect of the vehicle
[15]
;
(e)
On 16 March 2017, Basson
emails Kriel a breakdown of the sales transaction
[16]
listing the items as follows:
SELLING
PRICE:
R112, 000.00
DEPOSIT:
R10,000
FINANCE
AMOUNT:
R102 000.00
AUTOFIN
FEE:
- R12, 996.00
PROVISIONAL LICENSE
FEE:
- R1500.00
DEKRA:
+R850.00
CASH OUT TO
CLIENT:
=R88,354.00
(f)
On 17 March 2017:
(i)
Kriel meets with the first defendant who signs the finance
application forms, which Kriel in turn submits to the plaintiff;
(ii)
the plaintiff approves
finance in favour of the first defendant in the amount of
R112,000.00
[17]
;
(iii)
e-Motion Cars invoices
the plaintiff R111, 350.00 in respect of the vehicle, holding itself
out to be the owner of the vehicle
[18]
;
(iv)
the plaintiff issues a
remittance advice in favour of e-Motion Cars for an amount of
R115,080.00 in respect of the first defendant
[19]
;
(g)
On 22 March 2017;
(i)
the first defendant purportedly sold his vehicle to e-Motion Cars for
R98.245.61
[20]
. An invoice to
this effect was prepared by e-Motion Cars and signed by the first
defendant as seller;
(ii)
the vehicle is transferred from the second defendant into the name of
the first defendant
at 09h03am
[21]
;
(iii)
the vehicle is transferred from the first defendant to the name of
e-Motion Cars at 09h00am
[22]
;
(v)
the vehicle is transferred from e-Motion Cars into the name of the
plaintiff
at 09h03am;
(h)
On 23 March 2017, the
first defendant signs a SARS VAT24 form in which the selling price of
the vehicle is listed as R112 000.00
[23]
;
(i)
On 24 March 2017,
e-Motion Cars paid the first defendant an amount of R88,354.00 for
the sale of the vehicle
[24]
which payment the first defendant understood to be the loan he
applied for from Autofin;
(j)
On 3 May 2017, the first
defendant’s account is debited by R3,352.43 in favour of the
plaintiff
[25]
;
(k)
On 4 June 2017, the first
defendant’s account is debited by R3,250.94 in favour of the
plaintiff, which debit order is returned
unpaid
[26]
;
(l)
On 5 June 2017, the first
defendant applied for debt review with National Debt Counsellors
(“NDC”) and a notice to that
effect was sent to all the
first defendant’s creditors
[27]
;
(m)
The NDC proposal was accepted pursuant to a counter-offer made by the
plaintiff, which NDC considered
reasonable;
(n)
The first defendant made a couple of payments then defaulted,
resulting in the debt review
process being terminated;
(o)
The first defendant contacts the plaintiff in February 2018, to
enquire why the debt review
process was terminated;
(p)
The plaintiff had by then already instituted the present action.
[43]
In order for ownership to pass from one party to another, when
dealing with movable property,
there must be an intention on the part
of the transferer to transfer ownership of the movable property,
followed by actual delivery,
to the transferee, with a concomitant
intention on the part of the transferee to accept delivery of the
movable property and thus
to acquire ownership.
[44]
In terms of the typical arrangement, involving transfer of ownership
in respect of motor
vehicles acquired by means of an instalment sale
agreement, the motor dealership, as the owner of the vehicle would
handover possession
of the vehicle to the credit applicant, who
intends to purchase the vehicle and then hold the vehicle for the
credit provider (the
bank) and to acquire ownership on payment of the
final instalment.
[45]
The paperwork in the present matter (credit application) between the
plaintiff and the
first defendant was consistent with that typical
arrangement. It was on this basis, that the plaintiff approached this
court to
give effect to its rights in terms of the credit agreement.
The credit agreement between the first defendant and the plaintiff
indicated an intention for the first defendant to take possession of
the vehicle and to hold it on behalf of the plaintiff with
the
intention ultimately to acquire ownership himself, until payment of
the final instalment. However, as has been demonstrated
on the facts
set out above, that typical arrangement was not consistent with the
true state of affairs in the present matter. In
truth, the first
defendant was in fact and in law the owner and not the dealership
(e-Motion Cars). For ownership to have been
transferred to the
plaintiff it could either be achieved through the medium of e-Motion
Cars, with concomitant delivery to it or
directly from the first
defendant to the plaintiff (with concomitant delivery). In either
event, delivery would have to be a constructive
form of delivery,
since on any scenario, actual delivery was absent. If ownership had
been transferred to the plaintiff, then delivery
would have had to be
constructive as well. The question this court has to determine is
whether there was in fact delivery in any
constructive form, from the
first defendant to e-Motion Cars or from the first defendant to the
plaintiff.
[46]
The difficulty with the entire arrangement involving the sale and
subsequent apparent re-purchasing
of the vehicle, is that on any
construction of the facts, delivery constructive or otherwise never
takes place. In the absence
of delivery having taken place, the
plaintiff could never have acquired ownership and would consequently,
not be entitled to the
relief sought in this action. This is so
because a claim for the return of the vehicle is only available to an
owner of the vehicle.
[47]
In order for the plaintiff to have succeeded in this action, it had
to demonstrate that
a valid transfer of ownership was effected when
the first defendant sold the vehicle to e-Motion Cars, as its
subsequent acquisition
is dependent on that fact. The first purported
transfer of ownership holds enormous consequence for the plaintiff
for the following
reason. If no valid ownership was effected, then
the initial and subsequent transfer, to the plaintiff, were invalid.
From the
commencement of the transactions that the first defendant
was engaged in,
to wit
.: the transfer of the vehicle from the
second defendant to the first defendant, the transfer of the vehicle
from the first defendant
to e-Motion Cars, the transfer of the
vehicle from e-Motion Cars to the plaintiff, the first defendant
retained ownership and possession
of the vehicle exclusively.
[48]
The timeline of the transactions plays a
pivotal role in assisting this court to plainly assess the intention
of the parties in
relation to when and whether actual transfer of
ownership took place.
The apparent sale of the vehicle by the
first defendant to e-Motion Cars takes place on 22 March 2017. Yet,
e-Motion-Cars already
sold the vehicle to the plaintiff on 17 March
2017. At the time when e-Motion Cars sold the vehicle to the
plaintiff it was neither
the actual nor the purported owner of the
vehicle. It could only have become the
bona fide
owner after
the actual sale of the vehicle to it, by the first defendant had
taken place. The financing of the sale by the plaintiff
took place on
the understanding that e-Motion Cars and not the first defendant was
the owner of the vehicle. Given the fact that
the
purported
sale of the vehicle to e-Motion Cars takes place after the first
defendant had already concluded an instalment sale agreement with
the
plaintiff in respect of the vehicle, it could never have been the
intention of the first defendant to transfer ownership of
the
vehicle, which is necessary to actuate the finance agreement and
effecting of a payment for the vehicle to e-Motion Cars. On
the
evidence before me it is apparent that the plaintiff operated under
the bona fide belief that the vehicle in respect of which
it was
providing finance for, belonged to e-Motion Cars, whereas at the
point when the instalment sale agreement was concluded,
the first
defendant was in fact the owner of the vehicle and not e-Motion Cars.
The first defendant’s purported sale of the
vehicle to e-Motion
Cars after a credit agreement in his favour was already granted by
the plaintiff, apart from militating against
the notion that there
was a genuine transfer of ownership, also struck me as suspicious.
[49]
The first defendant’s retention of ownership rendered all
subsequent transfers invalid.
Contrary to what the authorities
provide, in the transactions pertaining to the vehicle and involving;
the first defendant, e-Motion
Cars and the plaintiff, there does not
appear, certainly not on the evidence before me, to be a real
intention on the part of the
first defendant to deliver the vehicle
to e-Motion Cars, with the intention of transferring ownership to it
or that e-Motion Cars
took possession of the vehicle with the
intention of acquiring ownership. In fact, the vehicle remained in
the possession of the
first defendant from the time he took ownership
thereof from Mathabate.
[50]
Moreover, when the first defendant met with Basson and concluded a
memorandum of agreement,
that agreement did not refer to e-Motion
Cars at all. There could therefore not have been an intention on the
part of the first
defendant as at 17 March 2017, to have effected
transfer of ownership to e-Motion Cars.
[51]
The first defendant, on the plaintiff’s version sold his
vehicle to e-Motion Cars
for R88,354.00. He then bought the vehicle
back from e-Motion Cars, by way of an instalment sale agreement for
R112 000.00.
The sale of the vehicle from the first defendant to
e-Motion Cars takes place 5 days after e-Motion Cars had already sold
the vehicle
to the plaintiff. It defies logic as to why a person
would sell his vehicle to a party at a substantially lesser amount,
simply
to buy it back from that party at a higher price.
[52]
The manner in which the purported sale and transfer of the vehicle
has been perpetrated
is congruent with the first defendant’s
case. The first defendant’s evidence was that he approached
Basson for a loan.
At no point during his interaction with Basson was
it disclosed to him that he would in fact be selling his vehicle to a
third
party, for a lesser amount and that he would then buy back the
vehicle from that same party by way of an instalment sale finance
agreement at a much higher price. Mr. Bruwer submitted that the first
defendant was at all times aware that the loan was to be
derived from
the financing of his vehicle and that this position was explained to
him, when he met with Basson and Kriel. Moreover,
the documents that
the first defendant signed were indicative of the fact that the first
defendant must have known that he was
in fact applying for finance
for his vehicle.
[53]
The first defendant’s apparent participation in the conclusion
of the paperwork to
facilitate the instalment sale agreement and the
debt review process does not validate the purported transfer of
ownership between
the first defendant and e-Motion Cars and between
e-Motion Cars and the plaintiff and e-Motion Cars at all.
[54]
Mr. Webbstock, appearing for the first defendant, requested me to
take particular note
of the fact that the first defendant is not well
educated and that his grade-4 education would have placed him at an
enormous disadvantage
in having to assess and appreciate the nature
of documents that he was presented with. In fact, Jonker testified
that it would
have taken him, a seasoned person in this field, some
10 minutes or so to have read through the documents. When it was
pointed
out to him that the first defendant was given far less time
to read the documents and that he would not have been in a position
to appreciate what he was required to sign, he responded that he
cannot offer an opinion in that regard, save to state that the
nature
of the papers the first defendant was required to sign would have
been explained to him.
[55]
I have observed the first defendant closely when he testified. The
first defendant is not
a sophisticated person. Although he was able
to express himself in English with relative ease, I was not convinced
that he, appreciated
the nature of the documents he signed and what
they meant. His handwriting struck me to be at the same level as one
who is at an
elementary school level. In light of my observations, I
must agree with Mr. Webbstock in his assessment of the first
defendant
in particular as it related to his ability to appreciate
the nature and extent of the various documents he signed and
processes
he was engaged in, including the debt review process. And
even if he did, as alluded to earlier, his appreciation or
participation
does not alter the legal position.
[56]
The first defendant went to see Basson because he wanted a loan. He
instead ended up with
him selling his vehicle to a third party and
buying the vehicle back from that same third party through an
instalment sale agreement
at a price, considering the interest
allotment, almost more than double the amount he supposedly sold the
vehicle for. The evidence
points very strongly to the fact that the
first defendant was subjected to a simulated transaction.
[57]
In
Roshcon
(Pty) Ltd v Anchor Body Bulders CC and Others
[28]
,
the
Court referred approvingly to what Innes J said in
Zandberg
v Van Zyl
1910 AD 302
, at 309
,
in respect of the test to be applied when considering an agreement
which may or may not be said to be a simulation. It said the
following:-
"The foundation of
our law in regard to simulated transactions is the classic statement
by Innes J in
Zandberg v Van Zyl
that:
‘
Now, as a
general rule, the parties to a contract express themselves in
language calculated without subterfuge or concealment to
embody the
agreement at which they have arrived. They intend the contract to be
exactly what it purports; and the shape which it
assumes is what they
meant it should have.
Not
infrequently, however (either to secure some advantage which
otherwise the law would not give, or to escape some disability
which
otherwise the law would impose), the parties to a transaction
endeavour to conceal its real character. They call it by a
name, or
give it a shape, intended not to express but to disguise its true
nature. And when a Court is asked to decide any rights
under such an
agreement, it can only do so by giving effect to what the transaction
really is: not what in form it purports to
be
.
The maxim then applies plus valet quod agitur quam quod simulate
concipitur. But the words of the rule indicate its limitations.
The
Court must be satisfied that there is a real intention, definitely
ascertainable, which differs from the simulated intention.
For if the
parties in fact mean that a contract shall have effect in accordance
with its tenor, the circumstances that the same
object might have
been attained in another way will not necessarily make the
arrangement other than what it purports to be. The
inquiry,
therefore, is in each case one of fact, for the right solution of
which no general rule can be laid down."
[58]
In
CSARS
v NWK
[29]
Lewis JA postulated the
and expanded the test as follows:
"
In
my view the test to determine simulation cannot simply be whether
there is an intention to give effect to a contract in accordance
with
its terms. Invariably where parties structure a transaction to
achieve an objective other than the one ostensibly achieved
they will
intend to give effect to the transaction on the terms agreed.
The
test should thus go further, and require an examination of the
commercial sense of the transaction
…."
[59]
In order to assess the degree to which a simulated transaction might
be at play, it is,
having regard to the above authorities, the duty
of the court to:
(a)
give effect to what the transaction is and not what in form it
purports to be;
(b)
satisfy itself as to the real intention definitely ascertainable,
which differs from the
simulated intention; and
(c)
enquire into the commercial sense of the transaction.
[60]
In determining what the true transaction is in the present
circumstances, one must have
regard to what the reason was why the
first defendant sought to engage Basson. He did so to acquire a loan.
This version is uncontested.
Basson then presented the documentation
that the first defendant had to complete, ostensibly under the guise
of applying for a
loan. At no point was it disclosed, certainly not
with the accuracy and clarity it deserved, that the first defendant
is to sell
his vehicle to a third party at a lower price and buying
it back from that same party at a higher price through an instalment
sale
agreement.
[61]
The second leg of the enquiry is thus easily discernible. The
intention was for the first
defendant to secure a loan and not to
sell his vehicle. The latter enquiry is the death knell of the
assessment. There is no conceivable
commercial sense in the first
defendant selling his vehicle for R88,354.00 and buying it back, by
way of an instalment sale agreement,
from the same party he
purportedly sold it to for an amount with interest to the tune of
R200,952.40.
[62]
In light of my findings below, it is not necessary for me to deal
with the issue pertaining
to whether the plaintiff advanced credit
recklessly. The conclusion of a credit agreement between the
plaintiff and the first defendant
is invalid because no valid
transfer of ownership, which is integral to the subsequent transfers,
had taken placed between the
first defendant and e-Motion Cars, or
between e-Motion Cars and the plaintiff.
[63]
In so far as the monetary element of the first defendant’s
counterclaim is concerned,
I must agree with Mr. Webbstock that the
plaintiff was not entitled to receive payments from the first
defendant in respect of
a credit agreement that arose in
circumstances where no valid transfer of ownership had taken place.
[64]
Whilst I have sympathy for the position the plaintiff finds itself
in, being the innocent
party, I cannot ignore the underlying
causa
that gave rise to this transaction. The plaintiff was not aware of
the nature and extent of the transactions between the first
defendant
and e-Motion Cars and it may be possible for it to institute action
to recover any damages suffered in purchasing a vehicle
from a
dealership who was not the owner of the vehicle at the time.
[65]
Given the fact that the parties have all achieved varying degrees of
success in this matter,
I am of the view that each party should pay
its own costs.
Order
[66]
In the result, I make the following order:
(a)
The plaintiff’s claim against the first defendant is dismissed;
(b)
The first defendant’s relief as prayed for in the counterclaim
against the plaintiff
is granted, only to the extent that the
plaintiff is ordered to pay the first defendant an amount of R6603.36
(six thousand six
hundred and three rand, thirty-six cents);
(c)
The second defendant’s counterclaim against the plaintiff is
dismissed;
(d)
Each party to pay its own legal costs.
B. FORD
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected on 22 August
2022 and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by e mail
and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 22 August 2022.
Date of hearing:
26, 27, 28 and 29 July 2022
Date of judgment:
22 August 2022
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff:
Adv. A. P. Bruwer
Instructed
by:
C.F. Van Koller Inc (Germiston)
For
the defendants:
Mr. M. Webbstock
Instructed
by:
JC Van Der Merwe Attorneys (Germiston)
[1]
Exhibit F, p2.
[2]
Unitrans
Automotive (Pty) Ltd v Trustees of The Rally Motors Trust
2011
(4) SA 35 (FB)
[3]
Info
Plus v. Scheelke and Another
1998
(3) SA 184 (SCA)
[4]
(Case no 917/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 147
(18 October 2021)
[5]
Estate
Shaw v Young
1936
AD at 239;
Dreyer
and Another NNO v AXZS Industries (Pty) Ltd
2006
(5) SA 548
SCA at 550 I-J;
S
v Levitt
1976
(3) SA 476
A
[6]
[1993] 1 All SA 259 (A)
[7]
Ronel
Noleen Smit v Calvin Kleinhans
(Case
no 917/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 147
(18 October 2021) par 11
## [8]The
registration of a vehicle in a person’s name is not
determinative of that person’s ownership of the vehicle; cf.
e.g.Info
Plus v Scheeke and Another1996
(4) SA 1058(W)
at 1060 andAkojee
v Sibanyoni and Another1976
(3) SA 440(W)
at 442C-F. See also the cases distinguishing between
‘statutory’ ownership of motor vehicles (evidenced
by
certification or registration etc.) and ‘common law ownership’
thereof; Cf.Van
Gend v Royal Exchange Assurance and Ano1969
(3) SA 564(E)
at 567, citingPottie
v Kotze1954
(3) SA 719(A)
(Cf:Sithole
N.O and Another v Sachal & Stevens (Pty) Ltd and Another
(14657/2019) [2021] ZAWCHC 194 (5 October 2021))
[8]
The
registration of a vehicle in a person’s name is not
determinative of that person’s ownership of the vehicle; cf.
e.g.
Info
Plus v Scheeke and Another
1996
(4) SA 1058
(W)
at 1060 and
Akojee
v Sibanyoni and Another
1976
(3) SA 440
(W)
at 442C-F. See also the cases distinguishing between
‘statutory’ ownership of motor vehicles (evidenced
by
certification or registration etc.) and ‘common law ownership’
thereof; Cf.
Van
Gend v Royal Exchange Assurance and Ano
1969
(3) SA 564
(E)
at 567, citing
Pottie
v Kotze
1954
(3) SA 719
(A)
(Cf:
Sithole
N.O and Another v Sachal & Stevens (Pty) Ltd and Another
(14657/2019) [2021] ZAWCHC 194 (5 October 2021))
[9]
Section 1(d)
of Act 64 of 2008
[10]
(80288-17) [2019] ZAGPPHC 3 (16 January 2019) par 16-17
[11]
1980 (3) SA 917
(A) at 922E – F
[12]
1978 (4) SA 281 (A)
[13]
1993 (3) SA 930
(A) at 933C – H
[14]
Exhibit E, p.4
[15]
Exhibit E, p.62
[16]
Exhibit E, p.72
[17]
Exhibit E, p.37
[18]
Exhibit E, p.31
[19]
Exhibit E,p.47
[20]
Exhibit E, p.71
[21]
Exhibit E, p.69
[22]
Exhibit E, p. 67
[23]
Exhibit E, p.70
[24]
Exhibit G
[25]
Exhibit B, p.D21
[26]
Ibid, p.D21
[27]
Exhibit B, p.D29
[28]
2014 ZASCA40
[29]
2011 (2) SA 67
(SCA) para 55
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Wesbank, A Division Of Firstrand Bank Ltd v PSG Haulers CC (38510/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 519 (3 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 519High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Wesbank,a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v PSG Haulers CC (38511/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 603 (25 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 603High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Wesbank a division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Blackatunity Proprietary Limited and Another (2024/004956) [2025] ZAGPJHC 673 (5 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 673High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Wesbank, a division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Stein (47072/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 243 (5 April 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 243High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Wesbank, A Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v Bohlale Mothipa Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (120260/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 915 (4 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 915High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar