Cilliers NO and Others v Firstrand Bank Limited trading inter alia as First National Bank (2019/20259) [2020] ZAGPJHC 361 (9 December 2020)

80 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Execution — Rescission of judgment — Application for rescission of default judgment and setting aside of warrant of execution — Applicants, as trustees of the Spreading the News Trust, sought rescission on grounds of lack of service and erroneous grant of judgment — Respondent contested application, raising points in limine regarding hearsay, late filing, and locus standi — Court found that service was not properly effected on the applicants, as the respondent was aware of the sale of the property and failed to notify them — Rescission granted as the judgment was erroneously granted in the absence of the affected parties.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an opposed application for the rescission of a default judgment and the setting aside of consequential execution process, including a warrant of execution and an order declaring immovable property specially executable. The application was brought in terms of Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) on the basis that the default judgment had been erroneously sought and granted in the absence of parties affected.


The applicants were Annelise Cilliers N.O. and Karel Frederick Cilliers N.O., cited as trustees of the Spreading the News Trust (“the Trust”), and Annelise Cilliers in her personal capacity as surety. The respondent was Firstrand Bank Limited trading inter alia as First National Bank (“the bank”).


The procedural history was that the bank obtained a default judgment on 15 July 2019 (per Vuma AJ) against the Trust (through its trustees) and against the third applicant as surety, in the amount of R838 928.06, together with an order declaring the relevant immovable property specially executable. A warrant of execution followed, dated 14 August 2019. The applicants then launched the present rescission proceedings, which were heard on 3 August 2020 and decided on 9 December 2020 (per Mia J).


The dispute concerned enforcement of a facility loan agreement concluded between the bank and the Trust, the validity of the process by which default judgment was obtained (especially service at a domicilium address that had been sold), and whether the bank had pursued judgment and execution without bringing relevant facts to the attention of the court that granted default judgment.


2. Material Facts


A written facility agreement was concluded on 2 June 2011 between the bank and the third applicant acting on behalf of the Trust. A facility sum of R2 480 000.00 was made available, repayable over 240 months. As security, the bank required mortgage bonds over two immovable properties (one in Cape Town and one in Johannesburg) and a deed of suretyship executed by the third applicant.


It was common cause, as the court treated it, that the domicilium citandi et executandi recorded for purposes of the bank’s proceedings was an address in Johannesburg (the [….] property). The court also accepted that the bank knew that this domicilium property had been sold and transferred (the judgment records transfer having taken place in 2015) because the bank was required to provide information to enable transfer, including a bond cancellation amount, and because the bank consented to the sale.


Despite that knowledge, the bank continued to send notices (including section 129 notices under the National Credit Act 34 of 2005) and served the main application process at the domicilium address after the property had been transferred. The judgment records that notices were sent by registered post to the domicilium address on 22 July 2016, 16 May 2017, and 17 April 2019, all after transfer in 2015, at a time when the property was no longer occupied by the applicants. The bank did not pursue substituted service or alternative service methods to reach the applicants.


The bank’s founding papers in the main application included allegations intended to support an order of special executability, including that the property appeared to be a holiday home (not a primary residence). A valuation was performed externally after unsuccessful attempts to gain access; the valuer estimated a market value of R650 000.00 and a forced sale value of R450 000.00.


A material factual contention raised by the applicants, and treated by the court as relevant to the rescission enquiry, was that the bank received the full benefit of the sale proceeds of the domicilium property paid into the facility account. On the applicants’ version, this payment settled arrears and placed the Trust ahead on its repayment obligations. The court recorded a dispute between the parties about the effect of an “extra” payment into the account, including whether it entitled the Trust to a form of payment holiday. The court did not finally determine the accounting dispute in this judgment but regarded it as reinforcing the appropriateness of further detail and account statements, and potentially debatement.


The court accepted, as central to the rescission enquiry, that service of the main application and notices did not reach the applicants, and that the bank on its own version effectively accepted that there was no service on the applicants. The judgment further records that the bank suggested in the main application that the third applicant “may nevertheless be residing” at the domicilium property despite knowing it had been sold, and the court treated this as a misrepresentation or, at minimum, a materially inaccurate presentation of facts.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine, first, a set of preliminary objections (points in limine) and, second, whether the requirements for rescission under Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) were met. The issues were primarily application of law to fact, with some factual evaluation, particularly as to service, knowledge of the domicilium sale, and standing.


The preliminary issues were whether the bank’s affidavits were inadmissible as hearsay due to lack of personal knowledge, whether the rescission application was late and required condonation, and whether the Trust had locus standi in light of an alleged defect in trusteeship (including whether all trustees acted jointly and whether a trustee’s resignation was valid without attaching a Master’s letter of authority).


The central merits issue was whether the default judgment and execution-related orders were “erroneously granted” in the applicants’ absence within the meaning of Uniform Rule 42(1)(a), particularly where service was effected at a domicilium address that the bank knew had been sold and would not bring the proceedings to the applicants’ attention. A further connected issue was whether the order declaring the property specially executable should stand in circumstances where the court granting judgment allegedly lacked full facts about occupation and service.


A further issue identified by the court (though not finally determined in the relief) concerned the quantification of the outstanding amount, the basis on which it was calculated, and whether the applicants were entitled to a debatement of account.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the hearsay objection, the court relied on Rees and another v Investec Bank Limited [2015] JOL 33635 (SCA) for the proposition that first-hand knowledge of every fact is not required of a deponent for large financial institutions, because the relevant information is typically contained in records under the deponent’s control. Applying that approach, the court held that the bank’s affidavits were not hearsay merely because the deponent was not personally involved in each underlying event.


On the timing objection, the court distinguished between rescission under Uniform Rule 31(2)(b) (where time periods can be relevant) and rescission under Uniform Rule 42(1)(a). The applicants expressly relied on Rule 42(1)(a) on the basis of an order erroneously sought or granted, primarily due to defective service and the bank’s knowledge that the domicilium was no longer effective. The court held that, on this footing, the applicants were not bound by the time limits contended for by the bank. The court additionally noted that, even on the bank’s own admission, there was no service on the applicants.


On locus standi, the court addressed the bank’s argument that the Trust lacked standing because (on the bank’s version) a trustee’s resignation was invalid and no Master’s letter of authority was attached to establish that only the first and second applicants were trustees. The court accepted the applicants’ position that they were acting jointly, supported by a confirmatory affidavit, and that the resignation of Mr Hannington in 2015 complied with clause 20.2 of the Trust deed (written notice). The court further accepted the applicants’ contention that the resignation did not contravene section 21 or provisions of the Trust Property Control Act 24 as referenced in the judgment, and treated the Master’s letter of authority as an additional method of proof rather than an absolute prerequisite on the papers as framed. The court therefore found that the Trust had established locus standi, and added that, in any event, the third applicant as surety had standing to bring the application and raise defences.


Turning to Rule 42(1)(a), the court set out the text of the rule and applied the principle that rescission is appropriate where an order was granted in the absence of an affected party, including where proper notice was not given, or where the true facts were not placed before the court granting default judgment. The court emphasised that the relevant enquiry is whether the judgment was erroneously granted, which can occur even if the order might otherwise have been correct on the merits.


On the facts, the court treated as decisive that the bank knew the domicilium property had been sold, had consented to the sale, and had received the benefit of the sale proceeds, yet continued to serve notices and the main application at that address years after transfer. The court regarded it as self-evident that such service would not have reached the applicants and that the bank did not take meaningful steps to effect substituted service or to locate an alternative address. The court further highlighted that the bank’s papers in the main application suggested that the third applicant might still be residing at the property despite the bank’s knowledge of the sale and transfer, and considered this to be a material misstatement to the court that granted default judgment.


The court also noted that the bank’s later account of how the applicants learned of the judgment involved documents found at a different property (a Cape Town property), whereas service of the main application and earlier notices was effected at the Johannesburg domicilium property. The court considered that the bank had not satisfactorily explained proper service, and that the returns of service were referred to but not attached, contributing to the conclusion that service was defective.


Regarding the payment dispute and the outstanding balance, the court did not finally determine the parties’ accounting disagreement but accepted that, given the applicants’ contention that the facility account had been brought up to date by the sale proceeds, and their contention about delay by the bank affecting interest and costs, it was appropriate that detailed statements be requested and that the issues be ventilated, potentially through debatement. This reinforced, in the court’s view, the appropriateness of rescission where default judgment had been obtained without proper service and without full facts being before the court.


On costs, the court applied the general principle that costs follow the result in the rescission application and concluded that the bank should bear the costs, including the costs associated with setting aside the special executability order, which the court ordered to include the costs of two counsel.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court rescinded and set aside the default judgment granted on 15 July 2019 under case number 2019/20259 in favour of the bank.


The court rescinded and set aside the warrant of execution against immovable property dated 14 August 2019.


The court set aside the order declaring the property specially executable, and ordered that the costs related to that aspect include the costs of two counsel.


The respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the rescission application.


Cases Cited


Rees and another v Investec Bank Limited [2015] JOL 33635 (SCA).


Custom Credit Corporation Ltd v Bruwer 1969 (4) SA 564 (D).


Theron v United Democratic Front (Western Cape Region) 1984 (2) SA 532 (C).


Topol v LS Group Management Services (Pty) Ltd 1988 (1) SA 639 (W).


Clegg v Priestley 1985 (3) SA 950 (W).


Athmaram v Singh 1989 (3) SA 953 (D).


Fraind v Nothmann 1991 (3) SA 837 (W).


Kili v Msindwana [2001] 1 All SA 339 (Tk).


Brangus Ranching (Pty) Ltd v Plaaschem (Pty) Ltd [2008] 4 All SA 542 (N).


Legislation Cited


National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (including reference to section 129 notices).


Trust Property Control Act 24 (as referenced in the judgment, including reference to section 21).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule 42(1)(a).


Uniform Rule 31(2)(b).


Held


The court held that the requirements of Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) were satisfied because the default judgment and related execution orders were erroneously granted in the absence of parties affected, in circumstances where the bank served process at a domicilium address that it knew had been sold and would not bring the proceedings to the applicants’ attention.


The court further held that the bank’s affidavits were not excluded as hearsay on the basis advanced, that rescission under Rule 42(1)(a) was not defeated for want of condonation based on the time periods argued by the bank, and that the Trust had established locus standi to bring the application (with the surety in any event also having standing).


The default judgment, the warrant of execution, and the order declaring the property specially executable were accordingly set aside, with costs awarded against the bank, including the costs of two counsel in relation to the special executability order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) empowers a court to rescind or vary an order erroneously granted in the absence of a party affected thereby, and rescission is generally appropriate where an affected party was absent because proper notice was not given or where material facts were not placed before the court granting default judgment.


In the context of affidavits deposed to on behalf of large financial institutions, the absence of first-hand knowledge of every fact by the deponent does not necessarily render affidavit evidence inadmissible as hearsay, where the information is drawn from records and files within the deponent’s control and oversight, consistent with the approach endorsed in Rees and another v Investec Bank Limited [2015] JOL 33635 (SCA).


Where a litigant effects service at a chosen domicilium while knowing that the domicilium is no longer operative in a practical sense (for example, because the property has been sold and the other party no longer occupies it), and takes no effective alternative steps to ensure notice reaches the affected party, a default judgment granted on such service may be treated as erroneously granted for purposes of Rule 42(1)(a).


Questions of trustees’ authority and standing in motion proceedings may be resolved on the papers where the court is satisfied that the trustees before it are acting jointly and that reliance on a Master’s letter of authority is not treated, in the circumstances presented, as the only permissible proof of authority; and, in any event, a surety sued under the judgment may independently have standing to seek rescission and raise defences affecting execution.

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[2020] ZAGPJHC 361
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Cilliers NO and Others v Firstrand Bank Limited trading inter alia as First National Bank (2019/20259) [2020] ZAGPJHC 361 (9 December 2020)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE:  NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
9
December 2020
CASE
NO:  2019/20259
In
the matter between:
ANNELISE
CILLIERS N.O.
First Applicant
KAREL
FREDERICK CILLIERS N.O.
Second Applicant
ANNELISE
CILLIERS
Third Applicant
and
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED trading
inter
alia as FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Respondent
In
re:
FIRSTRAND
BANK LIMITED trading
inter
alia as FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Applicant
and
ANNELISE
CILLIERS N.O.
First Respondent
ANDREW
JAMES HAN NINGTON N.O.
Second Respondent
KAREL
FREDERICK CILLIERS N. O
Third Respondent
ANNELISE
CILLIERS
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MIA, J
[1]
This was an application for a rescission of a default judgment (the
rescission application),
and setting aside of a warrant of execution
of property, obtained by the respondent against the Spreading the
News Trust (the "Trust")
represented by the first and
second respondents, in their capacities as trustees and against the
third respondent as surety. The
order granted was in terms of a
facility loan agreement where this court,  per Vuma AJ, granted
a default judgment in the
amount of R838 928 .06  against
the applicants and declared the [….] property, a secondary
property specially
executable. The application was opposed by the
respondent. In its opposition, the respondent raised two points
in
limine
and disputed the various defences
raised by the applicants.
[2]
The first applicant was Ms Annelise Cilliers N.O., cited in her
capacity as a trustee
for the time being of the SPREADING THE NEWS
TRUST, registration number 115356/94 ('the Trust'). Her
domicilium
citandi et executandi
(
domicilium
)for the purpose of
proceedings with the respondent was the address situated at [….],
Johannesburg. The second applicant
was Mr Karel Frederick Cilliers N.
O., cited in his capacity as a trustee for the time being of the
Trust.  The third applicant
was Ms Annelise Cilliers; who was
cited as a surety. She resides in the Western Cape. Her
domicilium
in the agreement with the respondent was the address situated at
[….], Johannesburg. The respondent was First Rand Bank
Limited,
a bank duly registered and incorporated in terms of the
company and banking laws of the Republic of South Africa, having its
registered
address at Group Company Secretary's Office, 4 Merchant
Place, Corner Fredman Drive and Rivonia Road, Sandton, Gauteng.
[3]
On 2 June 2011 the respondent and the third applicant representing
the Trust entered into
a written facility agreement. The respondent’s
standard terms and conditions applied to the structured facility
agreement.
A facility sum of R2 480 000.00 was made available to the
Trust. This was repayable over 240 months. As security for the
facility
sum, however, the respondent required mortgage bonds to be
registered over the [….] immovable property in Cape Town and
the immovable property situated at [….], as well as having a
deed of suretyship executed by the third applicant in favour
of the
respondent. According to the respondent, the Trust breached the
agreement, and the full outstanding amount became due and
payable
during the term of the facility agreement. It thus demanded payment
of the full balance outstanding. It served its demand
on the [….]
address which was the
domicilium
whilst
knowing that the property had been sold. This was so as it was
required to provide a bond cancellation amount to enable the
transfer
of the property.
[4]
The respondent placed before the court certain factors to persuade it
to declare the
property executable. It stated in its founding
affidavit in the main application that the property appeared to be a
holiday home.
A registered valuer, Mr Breet,
appointed by the respondent, indicated that he could not gain
access to the property after several unsuccessful attempts to contact

the contact number provided for the representative of the Trust. He
then conducted the valuation of the property externally, based
on the
comparative sales of properties in the surrounding area.  He
estimated that the market value of the property was R650
000.00 and a
forced sale value of R450 000.00. True copies of a Searchworks Deeds
Office, and conveyancer's certificate, generated
and drawn
respectively by Ms Michelle Da Costa, a conveyancing attorney in the
employ of the respondent's attorneys of record,
reflected that the
only bond registered against the property was in favour of the third
applicant.
[5]
The respondent indicated it did not know the Trust or the third
applicant’s
current financial position. The respondent
indicated the relevant section 129 Notices in terms of the National
Credit Act No 34
of 2005 (the NCA), were sent to the
domicilium
reflected as the [….] in the agreement. This was because
the applicants furnished no change of address once the [….]

property was sold. The result was that judgement was granted, and the
property was declared specially executable after service
upon
domicilium,
which the respondent was aware had been sold.
The court granting judgment had also been labouring under the
impression that
the property was not a primary residence, but was a
second property used as a holiday home.
[6]
The applicants place reliance on Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) for the
application. They allege
that the rescission of the judgment granted
on 15 July 2019 is necessary as it was an order erroneously granted
in the absence
of a party affected by it, namely them. The third
applicant contended that in her negotiations with the respondent, the
latter
was aware that the [….] property was in the process of
being sold. The sale was at the behest of the respondent, as was
evident from the communication attached to the application. The
respondent was aware of the sale and received the full benefit
thereof as the full proceeds of the sale of [….] property was
paid into the facility account which resulted in the arrears
being
paid up and the Trust being ahead with its payments on the account.
The facility only required R969 33.20 to be paid up at
that stage
whilst R 2 200 000.00 had been paid into the account.
The Trust was therefore ahead in its payments
by an amount of R1 230
66.80 where monthly payments due were R 22 303.00. It was
therefore on this basis that the applicant
asserted that the
application for the order was erroneously granted in the absence of
the applicants. Furthermore that the respondent
did not disclose the
full facts to the court when the application was made to grant the
default judgment when seeking the warrant
to declare the property
specially executable. The orders were granted without service on the
Trust or the applicant as the surety.
7.1
Three points
in limine
were raised by the parties. The first
the applicant took was that the deponent to the respondent’s
founding affidavit in
the main application and the answering
affidavit in the present application did not have personal knowledge
of the matter and the
affidavit amounted to hearsay. The application
for rescission was thus unopposed.
7.2   The
second point
in limine
which was raised by the respondent was
that the applicant ought to have applied for condonation for the late
filing of the application
for rescission as it had 20 days after the
judgment came to its attention to apply for rescission of the
judgment.
7.3   The
third point
in limine
which was also raised by the respondent
was the
locus standi
of the Trust to bring the rescission
application, which was disputed. The respondent alleged that the
resignation of one of the
trustees, Mr Andrew Hannington was not
valid, and since no Masters letter of Authority had been attached to
show that only the
first and second applicants were indeed the
trustees of the Trust - that the Trust has no
locus standi
due
to the general legal principle that all trustees act jointly.
[8]
a. A determination of the points
in limine
.
b. Whether the
applicant had made out a case in terms of Uniform Rule 42 for
rescission of the judgment and setting aside the order
declaring the
property specially executable.
c. The
quantification of the amount outstanding, how it was calculated and
whether the applicants were entitled to a debatement
of the account.
[9]
On the issue whether the respondent’s affidavit constituted
hearsay the respondent
referred to the decision of
Rees
and
another
v
Investec
Bank
Limited
[2015]
JOL
33635
(SCA),
where the Supreme Court of Appeal held

First
hand knowledge of every fact cannot and should not be required of the
official who deposes to the affidavit on behalf of such
financial
institutions and large corporations.

In
my view and in line with the
dictum
quoted, the respondent’s
affidavit is not hearsay. The contents of the file would have been
under the control of the deponent
and he would have had insight into
the file before deposing to the affidavit.
[10]
The respondent raised the point
in limine
that the applicant ought to have applied for condonation for the late
filing of the application for rescission as it was required
to apply
for rescission of the judgment timeously after it came to its
attention, namely twenty days. In this regard, the applicants
relied
on Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) and stated that the main application had
been erroneously sought and granted due to lack of service
on the
Trust and the surety. This was so since service of notices and the
application took place on immovable property, being the
[….]
property, years after the Trust and the surety had vacated the
property after its sale. The respondent was aware of
this fact. Thus,
the service of the main application would not have, and did not,
reach the notice of the applicants. In fact,
the respondents were
required to consent to the sale of the property and its transfer to a
third party. The application for rescission
was not brought in terms
of Uniform Rule 31(2)(b) but rather in terms of Uniform Rule 42(1)(a)
where the applicant relied on the
application being erroneously
sought and being erroneously granted. The applicant relied on the
service aspect as well as an overpayment
on their interpretation of
the agreement. On the basis that the reliance was on Uniform Rule
42(1)(a), I find in favour of the
applicants on this point as they
are not bound by time limits in terms of this latter rule. In any
event, on the respondent’s
own admission, there was no service
upon the applicants.
[11]
The third point
in limine
raised by the respondent was the
legal standing of the Trust to bring the rescission application. The
respondent alleged that the
resignation of one of the trustees, Mr
Hannington was not valid, and since no Masters letter of Authority
had been attached to
show that only the first and second applicants
were indeed the trustees of the Trust - that the Trust has no
locus
standi
due to the general legal principle that all trustees act
jointly. The applicants, however, contended that they were in fact
acting
jointly. The second applicant deposed to a confirmatory
affidavit which confirmed that the first applicant was authorised to
bring
the rescission application on behalf of the Trust as stated in
the founding affidavit. The respondents were informed about the
resignation of and furnished with proof of resignation of Mr
Hannington in  2015; this was prior to the institution of the

main application. They contend further that such resignation is
clearly in line with clause 20.2 of the Trust Deed that provides
for
resignation by written notice. In any event, the Trust Deed and
resignation by Mr Andrew Hannington, does not contravene Section
21
or any provisions of the Trust Property Control Act 24. The Master's
Letter of Authority is merely an additional method of proof;

consequently, I am satisfied that the Trust has established its
locus
standi
. I note further that if the Trust lacked locus standi that
the third applicant as surety has the locus standi to bring the
application
and raise the defences.
[12]
Uniform Rule 42(1) (a) states:

The court
may, in addition to any other powers it may have
mero
moto
or upon the application of any party
affected, rescind or vary-
(a)
An order or judgment erroneously granted in the
absence of any party affected thereby”
[13]
Our courts have usually granted relief and rescinded the orders in
circumstances where one of
the affected parties have been absent or
the true facts have not been brought to the attention of the court. A
party would be absent
if notice were not given or in the
circumstances where there was no proper notice given. This would
follow irrespective of whether
the order or judgment was otherwise
correct.
[1]
In the present matter, the respondents were aware that the
domicilium
which
was reflected in the agreement had been sold as they had, in fact,
given consent to sell the property. Furthermore, they had
received
the full benefit of the sale of the property. Once the full proceeds
of the sale of the property were paid into the account,
the
applicants were no longer in arrears.
[14]
The applicants stated that the requirement of the NCA
notice-of-default requirements were not met in
that the notices was
not served on them on including the requisite notices and
application. Besides the issue of the lack of notice,
the court which
was requested to grant default judgment was unaware of the full
extent of the facts. To this extent, the applicants
suggest that the
proceedings were irregular as the court was not aware that the
respondent was aware (in consenting to the sale
and transfer to a
third party) that neither the Trust nor the surety occupied such
property, and that such service of the main
application would not,
and did not, reach the notice of the applicants. Furthermore, the
respondents did not attempt to find a
substituted method of service
or an alternative address besides the [….] property. The
respondent continued to send notices
by registered post to the [….]
property on 22 July 2016, 16 May 2017, 17 April 2019  after the
[….] property
had already been transferred to a third party in
2015. At this stage, the property was no longer occupied by the
applicants,  and
the notices could not have come to their
attention. The respondent would clearly have been aware of this fact
when it brought the
main application.
[15]
The respondent in paragraph 13 of the main application whilst knowing
that the property was sold and
that transfer of the property took
place, suggested to the court in the main application that the third
applicant, despite the
sale of the property, may nevertheless be
residing at the premises. If the deponent to the founding affidavit
of the respondent
seeks to depose to the affidavit and states that
the information is within his personal knowledge, it appears that he
misrepresented
the facts to the court.  The respondent further
later accepts that the applicant learnt of the judgment when the
documents
were found at the [….] property in Cape Town whilst
service was on the [….] property. This property is different
from the [….] property on which the main application and
preceding notices were served. The returns of the Sheriff are
referred
to but not attached. It is evident that the respondent has
not satisfactorily dealt with the issue of proper service.
[16]
On the issue of the payment, the applicant’s case was that upon
the receipt of the proceeds of
the sale of the [….] property;
the account was paid up and was no longer in arrears. There appears
to be a disagreement
between the applicant and the respondent that if
the extra amount was paid in the applicant would not be required to
pay the monthly
amounts for a further period and would be afforded a
payment holiday. I do not doubt that if the applicants understood
that this
was not the position only the arrears would have been paid
into the account and the remaining proceeds from the sale of the [….]

property would have been kept aside to service the monthly payments
on the facility account. The applicants state that the respondent

delayed the transfer of the property when it was opportune to do so
and this increased the interests due and the costs ultimately.
Under
the circumstances it would be appropriate to request detailed
statements and to ascertain why there were delays and whether
the
applicant was prejudiced financially under the circumstances. If a
debatement is the appropriate method to do so I see no reasons
why
the respondent would be reluctant if their conduct was within good
practice at all times.  I am satisfied on the submissions
made
and on the papers before me that it is clear that the main
application was in fact erroneously granted in the absence of the

applicants and the default judgment and warrant should be set aside
on this basis.
[17]
Costs should merely follow the result of this rescission application.
ORDER
[18]
For the reasons above, I make the following order:
1.The  default
judgment granted under the above case number on 15 July  2019 in
favour of the respondent ( being the applicant
in the application for
judgment) is hereby set aside and rescinded.
2.The warrant of
execution granted against immovable property under the above case
number and dated 14 August 2019 in favour of
the respondent ( being
the execution creditor in the request for issuance of such warrant),
is hereby rescinded and set aside.
3.
The costs of the application is to be paid by the respondent.
4. The order
declaring the property specially executable is set aside with costs
which shall include the costs of two counsel.
S
C MIA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
On behalf of the
applicant

:  Adv GV Meijers
Instructed
by

:
Dawes Law
richard@dawes.co.za
On behalf of the
respondent

:
Adv M De Oliveira
Instructed
by

: Jason Michael Smith Incorporated
melinda@jmsainc.com
Date of
hearing

:  3 August 2020
Date of
judgment

:  9 December 2020
[1]
Custom
Credit Corporation Ltd v Bruwer
1969 (4) SA 564
(D);
Theron
v United Democratic Front (Western Cape
Region)
1984 (2) SA 532
(C);
Topol
v LS Group Management Services (Pty) Ltd
1988 (1) SA 639
(W);
Clegg
v Priestley
1985 (3) SA 950
(W);
Athmaram
v Singh
1989 (3) SA 953
(D);
Fraind
v Nothmann
1991 (3) SA 837
(W),
a case of a fugitive from justice;
Kili
v Msindwana
[2001]
1 All SA 339
(Tk);
Brangus
Ranching (Pty) Ltd v Plaaschem (Pty) Ltd
[2008]
4 All SA 542
(N).