Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 603South Africa
Wesbank,a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v PSG Haulers CC (38511/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 603 (25 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 August 2022
Headnotes
judgment against the defendant for the return of a FAW vehicle, together with costs. The defendant delivered a plea containing bald denials. It further delivered an affidavit resisting summary judgment.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Wesbank,a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v PSG Haulers CC (38511/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 603 (25 August 2022)
Wesbank,a Division of Firstrand Bank Limited v PSG Haulers CC (38511/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 603 (25 August 2022)
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sino date 25 August 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
38511/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
NO
In
the matter between:
WESBANK,
A DIVISION OF FIRSTRAND BANK LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
PSG
HAULERS CC
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 14h00 on the 25
th
of August
2022.
DIPPENAAR
J
[1]
The plaintiff seeks summary judgment
against the defendant for the return of a FAW vehicle, together with
costs. The defendant delivered
a plea containing bald denials. It
further delivered an affidavit resisting summary judgment.
[2]
In terms of that affidavit, the conclusion
of the instalment sale agreement in its terms, delivery of the truck
to the defendant
and the defendant’s breach of the said
agreement by its failure to make regular monthly payments are not
disputed. It was
further not disputed that the plaintiff reserved
ownership of the truck until the defendant discharged its
indebtedness to the
plaintiff. In terms of its particulars of claim,
the plaintiff elected to cancel the instalment sale agreement.
[3]
The first defence raised is that the application for summary judgment
does not meet
the requirements of r 32 as the plaintiff did not set
out the factors which validates its claim and why the defence raised
is not
sustainable. It was argued that the plaintiff should have
attached a record of all payments made by the defendant and its
failure
to do so rendered the application for summary judgment
defective.
[4]
In its heads of argument, reliance was further placed on a challenge
to the amounts
claimed and the contents of the certificate of balance
relied on by the plaintiff. It was argued that this challenge to the
certificate
of balance constituted a triable issue, justifying the
refusal of summary judgment.
[5]
The r 32 challenge can be disposed of succinctly. R 32(2)(b)
provides:
“
The
plaintiff shall, in the affidavit referred to in subrule (2)(a),
verify the cause of action and the amount, if any, claimed,
and
identify any point of law relied upon and the facts upon which the
plaintiff’s claim is based, and explain briefly why
the defence
as pleaded does not raise any issue for trial.”
[6]
In its affidavit, the defendant failed to identify the specific
manner in which the
application for summary judgment fails to comply
with the relevant rule. In my view, the affidavit in support of the
summary judgment
application complies with r 32(2)(b) as it verifies
the plaintiff’s cause of action and amount and provides an
explanation
why the plea does not raise a valid defence
[1]
.
The defendant’s challenge thus lacks merit.
[7]
Turning to the defendant’s challenge to the certificate of
balance, it did not
in my view, either in its plea or its affidavit,
put up any evidence supporting a
bona fide
valid challenge to
the contents of the certificate of balance. Attached to the answering
affidavit were various proof of payment
documents, pertaining to
payments to various account numbers under different reference
numbers, constituting defendant’s
“attempts to pay the
arrears” during 2020. At the hearing the defendant sought an
indulgence to clarify the payments
and the parties were afforded the
opportunity to deliver supplementary heads of argument on the issue.
Supplementary heads of argument
were received from both parties.
[8]
In its supplementary heads of argument, the defendant contended that
the aggregate
amount of the payments made by the defendant would
substantially reduce the amount owing to the plaintiff if such
payments were
allocated to the present instalment sale account, which
the plaintiff should have done. It was submitted that the payments
were
for the present account but that the plaintiff had not allocated
them. It was argued that this constituted a triable issue.
[9]
I am not persuaded that these contentions have merit. The defendant
held seven different
accounts with the plaintiff pertaining to
similar matters, all of which reflected arrears as at November 2020.
The same proofs
of payment were used by the defendant in opposition
to the seven actions instituted against it by the plaintiff. The
aggregate
of the arrears on each of the accounts exceed the aggregate
of the proofs of payment relied on by the defendant. It can thus not
be concluded that the payments extinguished the arrears on the
accounts.
[10]
In any event, the plaintiff elected to cancel the agreement as it was
entitled to do, which cancellation
was communicated to the defendant
when the summons was served on it on 8 December 2020. The Defendant
did not dispute that it was
in arrears at the time nor did it contend
that the plaintiff was not entitled to cancel the agreement in its
affidavit. Once the
defendant was in material breach of the
instalment sale agreement by failing to make regular monthly
payments, the plaintiff was
entitled to make an election in terms of
the said agreement to cancel it. The plaintiff was entitled to
communicated its election
in the summons and the particulars of
claim
[2]
.
[11]
I am not persuaded that the defendant has illustrated a
bona
fide
defence
in relation to this issue. The applicable threshold for illustrating
a
bona
fide
defence was enunciated thus by the Appellate Division in
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank
[3]
:
“
All
that the Court enquires into is: (a) whether the defendant has fully
disclosed the nature and grounds of his defence and the
material
facts upon which it is founded; and (b) whether on the facts so
disclosed the defendant appears to have, as to either
the whole or
the part of the claim, a defence which is both bona fide and good in
law.”
[12]
I conclude that the defendant has not met the necessary threshold or
that such defence is
bona fide
or good in law.
[13]
The last defence raised by the defendant was that as a result of the
national lockdown in terms
of the Disaster Management Act, the
defendant was unable to trade and there was
vis major
or a
supervening impossibility of performance and as such, performance
under the contract was excused.
[14]
As held in
Glencore
Grain Africa (Pty) Ltd v Du Plessis NO and Others
[4]
,
if provision is not made contractually by way of a
force
majeure
clause, a party will only be able to rely on the very stringent
provisions of the common law doctrine of supervening impossibility
of
performance, for which objective impossibility is a requirement.
Performance is not excused in all cases of
force
majeure
.
[15]
The instalment sale agreement does not make provision for
force
majeure
.
The agreement however specifically defines a Material Adverse
Effect.
[5]
In clause 10.3 of the instalment sale agreement it is recorded that
the plaintiff
may at its election, if an event or series of events
occurs which has a material adverse effect on the performance by the
defendant
of its obligations under the agreement, the plaintiff may
at its election change the terms of the agreement.
[16]
There is no evidence that the plaintiff was informed by the defendant
of any change in its financial
position at any time prior to the
launching of the present proceedings. The letter relied upon by the
defendant is dated 20 May
2021, well after the institution of the
action by the plaintiff. In terms of the instalment sale agreement,
the plaintiff retained
a discretion to assess the merits of such
alleged changed circumstances and decide whether or not to relax and
/ or amend any part
of the obligations on the respondent. No evidence
was presented by the defendant that the plaintiff elected to do so.
[17]
The defendant is thus constrained to illustrate compliance with the
common law doctrine of supervening
impossibility of performance.
[18]
It is apposite to refer to
Scoin
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Bernstein NO
[6]
,
wherein Pillay JA held:
‘
The
law does not regard mere personal incapability to perform as
consulting impossibility.’
[19]
In LAWSA
[7]
it is explained as
follows:
“
The
contract is void on the ground of impossibility of performance only
in the impossibility is absolute (objective). This means,
in
principle, that it must not be possible for anyone to make that
performance. If the impossibility is peculiar to a peculiar
contracting party because of his personal situation, that is if the
impossibility is merely relative (subjective), the contract
is valid
and the party who finds it impossible to render performance will be
held liable for breach of contract.
[20]
In
Unibank
Savings and Loans Ltd (formerly Community Bank) v ABSA Bank Ltd
[8]
,
it was held by Flemming DJP:
‘
Impossibility
is furthermore not implicit in a change of financial strength or in
commercial circumstances which cause compliance
with the contractual
obligations to be difficult, expensive or unaffordable.’
[21]
Applying these principles to the facts, it cannot be concluded that
the defendant has established
impossibility of performance as a
legally cognisable defence. First, the defendant put up no cogent
documentary evidence in support
of its contentions. Second and more
importantly, the impossibility on which the defendant relies is
subjective and specific to
itself. The change in the defendant’s
financial position is not, as required by law, absolute. The
obligation to render performance
even during lockdown can, in
general, be performed by parties in the position of the defendant.
The defendant’s personal
incapability does not render the
instalment sale agreement void.
[22]
In the circumstances, it cannot be concluded that the defendant has
illustrated a
bona fide
defence or that it has raised a
triable issue.
[23]
It follow that the plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment as
sought. There is no reason to
deviate from the normal principle that
costs follow the result.
[24]
I grant the following order:
[1]
Summary judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff for the
delivery of a vehicle
being a 2018 FAW 16.240 FL F/C C/C, chassis
number: [....] and engine number: [....];
[2]
The defendant is directed to pay the costs of suit.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
: 26 July 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 25 August 2022
PLAINTIFF’S
COUNSEL
: Adv L. Peter
PLAINTIFF’S
ATTORNEYS
: Rossouws Leslie Inc.
DEFENDANT’S
COUNSEL
: Mr G.M. Yeko
DEFENDANT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Mabuza Attorneys
[1]
Tumileng trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd; E&D
Security Systems CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
(3670/2019; 3671/2019)
[2020] ZAWCHC 52
(15 June 2020)
[2]
WinTwice Properties (Pty) Ltd v Binos and Another
2004 (4) SA 436
(W)
[3]
1976 (1) SA 418(A)
[4]
[2007] JOL 21043
(O); (4621/99)
[2002] ZAFSHC 2
(28 March 2002) at
10
[5]
Defined as: a substantial change in your shareholding and/or
interest and/or in your circumstances, which, in our reasonable
opinion has or will have a material adverse effect on financial
condition, business or operations and your ability and/or the
ability of your surety to perform the financial or other material
obligations under the agreement.
[6]
2011 (2) SA 118
(SCA) at paragraph 22
[7]
LAWSA Vol 5(1) First Reissue para 160, See also Frye’s (Pty)
Ltd v Ries 1957 3 SA 575 (A)
[8]
2000(4) SA 191 (W) at 198 D – E
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