About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2016
>>
[2016] ZAGPJHC 236
|
|
Nedbank Limited v Frederick (1483/2011) [2016] ZAGPJHC 236 (24 August 2016)
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
1483/2011
DATE: 24 SEPTEMBER 2016
In the matter between:
Nedbank
Limited
.......................................................................................................................
Applicant
And
Binder: Joseph
Frederick
......................................................................................................
Respondent
JUDGMENT ON APPLICATION FOR
LEAVE TO APPEAL
Van der Linde, J:
[1] This is an application for leave to appeal
against a judgment I gave on 7 April 2016 in a trial action between
the above parties.
The applicant was the plaintiff and had sued the
respondent for capital, interest and costs, in his capacity as a
surety for a
principal debtor who, according to the applicant, owed
it money.
[2] In the event I held that the principal debtor
did not owe the applicant any money, and so neither did the surety.
The order
I made at the end of the judgment was therefore to have
dismissed the claim with costs.
[3] The application for leave to appeal is
unopposed. There is also no application for leave to appeal against
the order I made
at the end of the judgment, nor against any part of
the reasoning that led to the order. The application for leave to
appeal is
against a decision that I made obiter in the course of the
judgment. This decision was that the clause in the suretyship which
entitled the applicant to rely on a certificate of balance, was
invalid.
[4] This application is complicated by the fact that
the decision sought to be appealed did not dispose of any part of the
relief
claimed by the applicant in the trial. Nor would an appeal
against the decision “
lead to a just and prompt resolution
of the real issues between the parties,”
as envisaged in
s.17(1)(c)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[5] I accordingly raised with Mr Wasserman, SC who
appeared with Mr Wickins for the applicant (neither appeared for the
plaintiff
at the trial), whether the decision concerned was
appealable. Counsel submitted that it was, and drew my attention to
the recent
judgment in the Constitutional Court in City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another,
[2016] ZACC 19
(19
May 2016) in which the majority referred with approval to Zweni v
Minister of Law and Order,
1993 (1) SA 523
(A) at 532J to 533 A.
[6] Zweni is of course authority for the proposition
that the judgment (or order) appealed against must have disposed of
at least
a substantial portion of the relief claimed in the main
proceeding. Afriforum however also held at [40] that the common law
approach
to appealability is subservient to the supreme law which
prescribes that the constitutional interests of justice is the only
requirement
for appealability. Granted, this was said in the context
of interim orders and the previous statute; but one would have
thought
that final orders and the current statute are an a fortiori
case.
[7] In the present matter there is no live issue
between the parties concerning the interpretation I gave to the
certificate clause.
But I accept counsel’s submission that if
the applicant cannot appeal, the applicant is left in the invidious
position of
having a judgment strike down a clause in its standard
form suretyships, a matter of far-reaching consequences, without
having
the opportunity to persuade a court of appeal that I was
wrong.
[8] In my view the interests of justice therefore
require that my decision concerning the validity of clause 6 of the
suretyship
be appealable. I accept too that there is a reasonable
prospect of success on appeal; matters of interpretation of written
instruments
can often be bedeviling.
[9] The application was
brought late. There is an application for condonation supported by an
affidavit. It explains how the applicant
was first advised one way
and then the other. There is no prejudice to the respondent. In the
circumstances the condonation should
be granted.
[10] I believe that the
full court of this division is the appropriate forum for the appeal.
In the result I make the following
order:
(a) The application for condonation for the late
filing of the application for leave to appeal, dated 17 August 2016,
is granted.
(b) The applicant is granted leave to appeal to the
full court of this division against the decision in paragraph [19] of
my judgment
of 7 April 2016, in which I found that clause 6 of the
suretyship, exhibit D in the trial, is invalid and unenforceable.
(c) No order as to costs issues.
WHG van der Linde
Judge, High Court
Date of hearing: 22 August, 2016
Judgment Date: 24 August, 2016
For the applicant: Adv. JG Wasserman, SC
With him: Adv. GD Wickins
Instructed by Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc
1 Protea Place
Sandown
Sandton
011 – 562 1000
Ref. E Bester/01989448