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[2021] ZAWCHC 219
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Avrum Finance (Pty) Ltd v Saaiman and Others (15035/2019) [2021] ZAWCHC 219 (29 October 2021)
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number: 15035 /
2019
In
the matter between:
ARVUM
FINANCE (PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT
(Registration
No. 2007/022356/07)
and
ANDRÉ
DANIËL
SAAIMAN
FIRST RESPONDENT
(Identity
No. [….])
CORNÉ
ADRIAAN
SAAIMAN
SECOND RESPONDENT
(Identity
No. [….])
ADNRÉ
DANIËL SAAIMAN
N.O.
THIRD RESPONDENT
CORNÉ
ADRIAAN SAAIMAN
N.O.
FOURTH RESPONDENT
FREDERIK
THOMAS SAAIMAN N.O.
FIFTH RESPONDENT
BESPOKE
FIDUCIARY SERVICE (PTY) LTD N.O.
SIXTH RESPONDENT
(As
trustees for the time being of the Corne Trust (IT391/1989))
Coram:
Wille, J
Heard:
14
th
of October 2021
Delivered:
29
th
of October 2021
JUDGMENT
WILLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an opposed motion for an order sounding in money based on the
provisions of a suretyship document
[1]
.
The applicant is a finance company. Initially there were (6)
respondents cited in these application proceedings.
The first
and second respondents are natural persons and the remaining (4)
respondents were cited in their capacities as the trustees
of ‘The
Corné Saaiman Trust’
[2]
.
Counsel for the applicant wisely abandoned the seeking of any relief
as against the trust. This, in reply and in response
to the
opposing affidavits filed by the respondents. The relief now
sought is solely directed as against the first and second
respondents
[3]
. The first
and second respondents shall be referred to as the respondents,
unless otherwise specifically indicated.
THE
SURETYSHIP DOCUMENT
[2]
The
respondents signed the suretyship. The underlying reason for
this security was because the applicant agreed to advance
certain
monies, from time to time, to Jongberg
[4]
,
in the form of a loan. As a surety for the principal debtor’s
indebtedness to repay the loan advanced by the creditor,
the
respondents, jointly and severally bound themselves as sureties and
co-principal debtors with Jongberg, in favour of the applicant.
RELEVANT
‘DOCUMENTARY’ DEFINITIONS
[3]
The
‘Capital Amount’ is defined in the suretyship as follows:
‘
...means
the amount to be advanced by the creditor to Jongberg in instalments
commencing on…and as more fully described in
the Seasonal
Advance Loan Agreement’
[5]
[4]
Further,
the ‘Loan Amount’ is defined as follows:
‘
...means
the Capital Amount plus all accrued interest, fees, and costs to be
repaid to the creditor, as more fully described in
the Seasonal
Advance Loan Agreement’
[5]
The
‘Seasonal Advance Loan Agreement’ is described as:
‘…
means
the Seasonal Advance Loan Agreement entered into and between the
Creditor, Jongberg, and Unlimited Fruit
[6]
in terms of which the Creditor advanced the Capital Amount to
Jongberg as production/working capital’
[7]
[6]
‘
Unlimited
Fruits’ features as an entity on the suretyship document and is
defined as:
‘
...a
private company incorporated in terms of the Laws of the Republic of
South Africa…’
The
reason why I mention Unlimited Fruits
[8]
,
at this stage will become more apparent when the merits of this
application as discussed. More about this later.
[7]
Most
importantly, the suretyship provides that the respondents bind
themselves as sureties for all amounts due as a result of monies
lent
and advanced by the creditor to Jongberg as a consequence and in
terms of the Seasonal Advance Loan Agreement and ‘any
further
amounts paid on behalf of Jongberg.
[9]
Moreover, the sureties themselves warrant that they had a material
interest in binding themselves in terms of the suretyship
which was
entered into for their benefit.
[10]
THE
PRODUCTION LOAN AGREEMENT
[8]
One of
the arguments piloted by the respondents is that the suretyship is
not enforceable because it refers in terms to the ‘Seasonal
Advance Loan Agreement’ and not the ‘Production Loan
Agreement’, under and in terms of which the monies were
loaned
and advanced to Jongberg (the principal debtor).
[9]
In my
view there is no merit in this shield raised by the respondents.
I say this because of the following, namely: that
it is
conceded that at least R402 180,33 was loaned and advanced by
the creditor to the principal debtor: that the suretyship
document includes a reference to all amounts due as a result of
monies lent and advanced by the creditor to Jongberg: that
the
capital amount (as defined) includes a reference to all amounts
advanced by the creditor to the principal debtor and most of
all, the
sureties warranted that they enjoy a material interest in the monies
advanced by the creditor to the principal debtor.
[10]
Notably,
this agreement also includes the citation of ‘Fruits’ as
a party to the Production Loan Agreement. This
agreement in
terms places upon ‘Fruits’ a repayment obligation to the
creditor subject to certain commissions and deductions
[11]
.
Put in another way, it is abundantly clear that ‘Fruits’
also directly benefited from the loan capital advanced
by the
creditor to the principal debtor.
[11]
Finally,
in terms of this agreement
[12]
,
the creditor enjoys the right to ‘prima facie’ prove the
extent of the indebtedness to it by the principal debtor
and the
sureties by way of a certificate of balance signed by any director of
the creditor. This certificate of balance has
been annexed to
the papers for the sum of R570 373,76 and is correctly signed by
a director of the creditor.
THE
APPLICANT’S CASE
[12]
The
applicant contends for the position that the alleged disputes of fact
raised by the respondents are not
bona
fide
and
are raised in an attempt to avoid their obligations under and in
terms of the suretyship.
[13]
They
say this, inter alia, because of the following, namely: that
there was in existence only one single loan agreement between
the
creditor and the principal debtor, for which the sureties bound
themselves in the suretyship: that the amount outstanding
to
the applicant by the principal debtor has been accepted by the BRP to
be the correct amount due, owing and payable and that
neither ‘public
policy’ nor the common law, under this set of specific factual
circumstances, should allow the sureties
to escape their obligations
under and in terms of their suretyship. In summary they say it
matters not that the Production
Loan Agreement was referred to as the
Seasonal Advance Loan Agreement. There was after all, only one
loan agreement.
THE
RESPONDENTS’ CASE
[14]
The
respondents deny that they are indebted to the creditor in the amount
of R570 373,76 as reflected in the certificate of
balance.
They say at most (if at all), the debt due was the sum of
R402 180,33. Further, they advance that after
the
principal debtor was placed into business rescue, Fruits and, not the
applicant, filed a claim with the BRP in the amount of
R570 373,76.
The argument is that the certificate of balance is accordingly in
direct contradiction with the terms and
conditions of the claim
formulated by Fruits against the principal debtor in business rescue.
THE
RELEVANT FACTUAL MATRIX
[15]
On the
12
th
of September 2018, the second respondent sent a representative of the
applicant an email enclosing the last page of the signed
suretyship
agreement
[13]
. In this
email, the second respondent requested that certain urgent payments
be made by the applicant on the principal debtor’s
behalf.
The subject line of this email reflected the label ‘Seasonal
Advance Loan Agreement’.
[16]
On the
same day the first respondent sent to the creditor a copy of the
signed ‘Production Loan Agreement’. The
subject
line of the covering email reflected the words ‘Signed Seasonal
Loan Agreement’. In essence, the agreement
concluded
between the parties made provision that amounts would be advanced by
the creditor to the principal debtor directly, or
to named third
parties, limited to the sum of R1 668 193,43.
[17]
Thereafter,
on the 28
th
of May 2019, the directors of the principal debtor adopted a
resolution and placed the principal debtor under business rescue.
On the 30
th
of May 2019, the applicant informed the first respondent that the
amount due owing and payable was the sum of R402 180,33.
[18]
Subsequently,
on the 10
th
of June 2019, a director of the applicant certified in a certificate
of balance that the amount owed to the creditor was the sum
of
R570 373,76.
[19]
The
respondents attorneys, after the launch of the application, delivered
a notice in terms of rule 35 of the rules of the court
[14]
,
in which they requested more precise detail as to the accounting
documentation between the creditor and the principal debtor.
These documents were subsequently provided and no engagement is
really had with this documentation in these papers before me,
DISCUSSION
[20]
As an
alternative, the applicant seeks a rectification of the suretyship
document to include a reference to the ‘Production
Loan
Agreement’. In my view this is totally unnecessary.
It is common cause that the creditor loaned and advanced
the sum of
at least R402 180,33 to the principal debtor, for which
obligations the respondents signed as sureties. The
suretyship
references and includes a liability for ‘any further amounts
paid on behalf of Jongberg’.
[21]
A
surety’s liability is solely for the very obligation for which
he has undertaken the suretyship. This much is clear
from what
was held in
Trans-Drakensburg
.
[15]
By contrast, in this case the respondents, were acutely aware of the
principal obligation for which they gave their undertakings
in terms
of the suretyship. Their suretyship was for monies loaned and
advanced to the principal debtor by the creditor.
This loan was
secured by the respondents as sureties to in the principal debtor in
favour of the creditor.
[22]
The
applicant’s claim is for the sum of R570 373,76
.
A
certificate of balance is annexed
as
‘
prima
facie’
proof
of this amount as due owing and payable. The manner in which
the amount calculated has been set out in the claim documents
submitted to the BRP of the principal debtor. This claim,
together with the quantum thereof, albeit in the name of ‘Fruits’,
has been accepted by the BRP, as the correct claim.
[23]
The
respondents say that the amount as claimed by the applicant is
‘unreliable’. I take it that this claim for
‘unreliability’ extends only to the difference between
the claim of R402 180,33 and the claim of R570 373,76.
The material before me exhibits further payments to certain third
parties, namely: a payment to ‘Zaiger’ in the
sum
of R78 406,77 and a payment to ‘Custom Plum’ in the
sum of R89 789,66. These payments, when added
to the sum
of R402 180,33 make up the sum of R570 373,76. The
Custom Plum amount is referred in some of the papers
as the sum of
R89 789,66 as opposed to R89 786,66.
[24]
Accordingly,
the
issue is whether this forms the subject of a genuine dispute between
the parties. In reply, the creditor advances that
the initial
amount claimed in the sum of R402 480,33 failed to take into
account these (2) third party payments referred to
in my previous
paragraph. The respondents’ argument on this is that
these (2) payments had already been allocated to
the ledgers of the
creditor as early as the 31
st
of October 2018. Significantly, however the certificate of
balance was only signed on the 10
th
of June 2019. This, for the sum of R570 373,76.
[25]
Elaborating
on this argument, the respondents advance their ‘unreliable’
theory carries weight because ‘Fruits’
and not the
applicant creditor filed a claim of R570 373,76 with the BRP.
The person who signed the certificate of balance
was the very same
director who signed the claim form on behalf of Fruits that was
submitted to the BRP.
[26]
In a
further complication, the method of proof of the outstanding
indebtedness, by way of a certificate of balance, is contained
in the
provisions of the ‘Production Loan Agreement’.
Moreover, in the list of creditors contained in the business
plan of
the BRP, the claims of ‘Zaiger’ and ‘Custom Plum’
are listed separately, from the claim of the
creditor.
[27]
The
business rescue plan was published on the 19
th
of August 2019 and was adopted by the majority of creditors
(including Fruits), on the 2
nd
of September 2019. The applicant endeavours to explain this by
contending that the creditor and Fruits ‘are in the
same group
of companies’. This may be so, but both legally and
factually they are discrete juristic entities.
[28]
I am
satisfied on the material before me that undoubtedly the sum of
R402 180,33 is due owing and payable by the principal
debtor to
the creditor, for which the respondents are liable under their
suretyship obligations. I remain unpersuaded and
unsatisfied on
the papers before me, as currently formulated, that the sum of
R570 373,76 is due owing and payable by the
principal debtor to
the creditor and therefore by extension, due by the respondents.
COSTS
AND ORDER
[29]
The
applicant seeks costs on an attorney and client scale against the
first and the second respondents. The applicant also
avers that
it should be awarded costs of its ‘abandoned’ proceedings
against the remaining trust respondents, alternatively,
not be held
liable for the costs of its ‘abandoned’ proceedings
against the remaining trust respondents. The
respondents
suggest that the applicant and the trust respondents should each pay
their own respective costs in connection with
the ‘abandoned’
proceedings against the remaining trust respondents. On this, I
agree.
[30]
As far
as the request for attorney and client costs is concerned, the
attorney and client costs provision appears in the ‘Production
Loan Agreement’ and not in the suretyship document.
Accordingly, I am not inclined to entertain any costs award on
the
scale as between attorney and client.
[31]
In the
result, the following order is granted, namely:
1.
That
the first and second respondent, jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved, are hereby ordered to pay
to the
applicant the sum of R402 180,33 within (10) days of date of
this order.
2.
That
the first and second respondents, jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved, shall be liable for
mora
interest at the legal rate (as determined from time to time), to the
applicant on the sum of R402 180,33.
3.
That
each party shall bear their own respective costs in connection with
the litigation between the applicant and the third, fourth,
fifth and
sixth respondents.
4.
That
the first and second respondents jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved, shall be liable for the applicant’s
costs of and incidental to this application for the relief sought as
against them (the first and second respondents), on the scale
as
between party and party, as taxed or agreed.
E. D. WILLE
Judge
of the High Court
Cape
town
[1]
The
‘suretyship’
[2]
The
‘trust’
[3]
The
‘respondents’
[4]
The
‘principal debtor’
[5]
More
about this agreement later.
[6]
More
about this ‘entity’ later.
[7]
I
say that this includes the payment of legitimate creditors of
Jongberg.
[8]
‘
Fruits’
[9]
Clause
3.2
of the Suretyship
[10]
Clause
3.4
of the Suretyship
[11]
Clause
7.1.3
of the Production Loan Agreement
[12]
The
Production Loan Agreement
[13]
The
second respondent was ‘copied in’ on this email.
[14]
The
Uniform Rules of Court
[15]
Trans-
Drakensberg Bank v Guy
1964
(1) SA 790
(D) at 795 and 796