Nedbank Ltd v Sqaure Metre Development (Pty) Ltd and Others (28031/09) [2009] ZAGPPHC 280 (6 August 2009)

80 Reportability
Banking and Finance

Brief Summary

Execution — Summary judgment — Applicability of the National Credit Act — Nedbank Limited sought summary judgment against Square Metre Development (Pty) Ltd and sureties for R718 309.39 due under a mortgage loan. Defendants contended that the National Credit Act was applicable and that the claim was not liquid. Court held that the Act did not apply as the loan constituted a large agreement owed by a juristic person, and the claim was liquid as it was based on a mortgage bond. Summary judgment granted in favor of the plaintiff.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings were an application for summary judgment brought in an action instituted by Nedbank Limited (plaintiff) against Square Metre Development (Pty) Ltd (first defendant, sued as principal debtor) and Margarethe van Rensburg, Brent van Rensburg, and Mandie Jansen (second to fourth defendants, sued as sureties).


The matter came before the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, after the defendants entered an appearance to defend. The plaintiff, relying on the alleged breach of a loan agreement secured by a mortgage bond, applied for summary judgment. The defendants opposed the application by filing opposing affidavits.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the enforceability—on summary judgment—of a bank’s claim for a money judgment, ancillary relief declaring mortgaged property specially executable, and costs, in circumstances where the defendants raised defences based on (i) the alleged applicability and non-compliance with section 129 of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005, (ii) the alleged illiquidity of the claim, and (iii) the alleged invalidity of the deeds of suretyship under section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act 50 of 1956.


Material Facts


Nedbank Limited sued for payment of R718 309.39, together with interest and costs, alleging that the first defendant had failed to comply with the terms of a loan agreement secured by a mortgage bond. The second to fourth defendants were sued as sureties for the first defendant’s indebtedness.


It was common cause for purposes of the summary judgment proceedings that the defendants had entered appearance to defend and that the plaintiff’s claim was pursued as a claim for a specified monetary amount, with interest, and with execution against the mortgaged property. The plaintiff relied on the outstanding balance under the mortgage loan, stated to be claimable by way of a certificate of balance.


A dispute arose in relation to the defendants’ contention that the first defendant had three accounts with the plaintiff and that the amount claimed represented an aggregate across those accounts. The defendants contended that amounts paid into other accounts in excess of monthly obligations should have been allocated to the account on which the action was based, with the result (so they contended) that the sued-upon account would not be in arrears. The court noted, however, that the defendants did not identify the relevant payments with specificity or quantify what should have been allocated.


In resisting summary judgment, the sureties further raised a contention that the deeds of suretyship did not comply with statutory formalities because they did not expressly refer to the specific account upon which the plaintiff’s action was based. The deeds of suretyship, however, contained broad wording binding the sureties as sureties and co-principal debtors for all sums the debtor “may now or from time to time hereafter owe or be indebted” to the bank, including indebtedness arising “otherwise howsoever”.


Legal Issues


The court was required to determine, for purposes of a summary judgment application, whether the defendants had disclosed a bona fide defence (or defences) which, if proved at trial, would constitute a good defence to the plaintiff’s claim.


The central legal questions were, first, whether the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 applied to the mortgage loan advanced to the first defendant (a juristic person) such that section 129 compliance was required, and if so whether there had been compliance. This was primarily a question of law (statutory applicability), turning on the classification of the agreement and the status of the consumer.


Second, the court had to decide whether the claim was for a “liquidated amount in money” as required by Rule 32(1)(b) for summary judgment, given the defendants’ assertion that the amount was an aggregate across multiple accounts and that payment allocation was disputed. This involved the application of legal principles regarding liquidity to the pleaded basis of the claim.


Third, the court had to decide whether the deeds of suretyship complied with section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act 50 of 1956, notwithstanding the absence of an express reference to the specific account forming the basis of the action. This again was largely a question of law, applied to the wording of the suretyships.


Court’s Reasoning


On the National Credit Act point, the court considered the provisions governing the Act’s applicability to juristic persons, including the statutory exclusions and the threshold value determined by the Minister (recorded as one million rand, determined in Government Notice 713 in Government Gazette 28893 of 1 June 2006). The court further considered the classification of a mortgage agreement as a large agreement (as defined in section 9(4), as referenced in the judgment). On this basis, the court concluded that the outstanding amount was due in terms of a mortgage loan constituting a large agreement owed by a juristic person, and therefore held that the National Credit Act was not applicable to the loan advanced by the plaintiff to the first defendant. Having reached that conclusion, the court regarded it as unnecessary to decide whether section 129 had in fact been complied with.


On the contention that the claim was not liquid, the court applied the established meaning of a “liquidated amount in money” for purposes of summary judgment: an amount either agreed upon or capable of speedy and prompt ascertainment. It accepted that the plaintiff’s claim was based on the amount outstanding under a mortgage bond, and that it was claimable by way of a certificate of balance. The court held that a dispute regarding the amount outstanding does not, without more, render the claim illiquid for purposes of summary judgment.


Turning to the substantive defence suggested by the defendants (misallocation of payments across multiple accounts), the court treated the “gravamen” of the defence as being that payments made were allocated to other accounts but should have been allocated to the account sued upon. The court emphasised that, although a defendant resisting summary judgment is not required to plead with the precision of a plea, the defendant must set out the facts relied upon with sufficient clarity to enable the court to determine whether a defence has been disclosed that would constitute a good defence if proved at trial.


Applying that principle, the court found that the defendants did not identify the payments relied upon, nor did they quantify the amounts allegedly misallocated. The court also considered the reference to an annexed account statement (annexure “C”) and observed that it showed that even that account was in arrears and that payments were sporadic and did not bring the account up to date. The court regarded this as undermining, rather than supporting, the defendants’ only possible defence.


On the suretyship point, the court considered the argument that the suretyships did not comply with section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act 50 of 1956 because they did not expressly refer to the account underpinning the action. The court examined the wording of the suretyships, which covered all sums owed by the debtor to the bank “now or from time to time” and arising from various sources “otherwise howsoever”, including legal costs and incidental charges. It held that the account upon which the claim was based fell within this description. The court also relied on authority holding that even the absence of the name of the principal debtor and incorporation by reference to another agreement does not necessarily render a deed of suretyship invalid under section 6, and concluded that there was no substance in this defence.


Having rejected the defences raised, the court concluded that summary judgment should be granted.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted summary judgment against the defendants jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.


The court ordered payment of R718 309.39, together with interest at 14.15% per annum calculated daily from 2 January 2009 to date of payment.


The court further ordered that the mortgaged property described in the order be declared specially executable for the sums and costs.


Costs were awarded on the scale as between attorney and client, to be taxed, together with Sheriff’s charges and collection commission as provided for in the mortgage bond.


Cases Cited


Lester Investments (Pty) Ltd v Narshi 1951 (2) SA 464 (C)


Fatti’s Engineering Co (Pty) Ltd v Vendick Spares (Pty) Ltd 1962 (1) SA 736 (T)


Botha v W Swansen & Company (Pty) Ltd 1958 (2) PH F 85 (CPD)


Commercial Bank of Namibia Ltd v Trans Continental Trading Namibia 1992 (2) SA 66 (NmHC)


Breytenbach v Fiat 1976 (2) SA 226 (T)


Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Silver 2003 (1) SA 365 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


National Credit Act 34 of 2005


General Law Amendment Act 50 of 1956


Government Notice 713 in Government Gazette 28893 of 1 June 2006 (threshold value determination under section 7(1) of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005)


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule 32(1)(b)


Held


The National Credit Act 34 of 2005 was held to be inapplicable to the mortgage loan at issue, which the court treated as a large agreement involving a juristic person, with the result that it was unnecessary to determine compliance with section 129.


The plaintiff’s claim, founded on the outstanding balance under a mortgage bond and claimable via a certificate of balance, was held to be for a liquidated amount in money for purposes of summary judgment, and the defendants’ dispute about allocation of payments did not render the claim illiquid.


The defendants were held not to have disclosed a bona fide defence with sufficient factual particularity, because they did not identify or quantify the payments allegedly misallocated, and the account statement relied upon did not support the contention that the relevant account was not in arrears.


The deeds of suretyship were held to comply with section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act 50 of 1956, and the absence of an express reference to the specific account sued upon did not invalidate them, given their broad terms and the authority relied upon.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A credit agreement involving a juristic person may fall outside the operation of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 depending on the statutory exclusions and the classification of the agreement, including where the agreement is treated as a large agreement and the statute excludes such agreements involving juristic persons as contemplated in the provisions referenced by the court.


For purposes of Uniform Rule 32(1)(b), a “liquidated amount in money” includes an amount that is agreed or capable of speedy and prompt ascertainment; a dispute about the correctness of the amount outstanding does not, in itself, render a claim illiquid where the claim is founded on an instrument such as a mortgage bond and is claimable by way of a certificate of balance.


A defendant resisting summary judgment must disclose the material facts underlying the alleged defence with sufficient clarity to enable the court to assess whether, if proved at trial, it would constitute a good defence; merely stating the nature of a defence (such as payment or misallocation) without identifying and quantifying the factual basis may be insufficient.


A deed of suretyship drafted in broad terms to cover all present and future indebtedness of a debtor to a creditor may satisfy the requirements of section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act 50 of 1956, and the absence of an express reference to a particular account (or, as noted in the authority relied upon, even certain identifying details) does not necessarily invalidate the suretyship where the obligation is otherwise adequately described.

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[2009] ZAGPPHC 280
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Nedbank Ltd v Sqaure Metre Development (Pty) Ltd and Others (28031/09) [2009] ZAGPPHC 280 (6 August 2009)

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 NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
(REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA)
CASE
NUMBER: 28031/09
In
the application between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
PLAINTIFF
and
SQUARE
METRE DEVELOPMENT (PTY) LTD
1
st
DEFENDANT
(REGISTRATION
NO: 2004/028997/07)
MARGARETHE
VAN RENSBURG
2
nd
DEFENDANT
BRENT
VAN RENSBURG
3
rd
DEFENDANT
MANDIE
JANSEN
4
th
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
[1]
The plaintiff, Nedbank Limited, sued the first defendant as principal
debtor and the second, third and fourth defendants as
sureties for
payment of R718 309.39, pursuant to the first defendant’s
alleged failure to comply with the terms of a loan
agreement, secured
by a mortgage bond, interest and costs.
[2]
The defendants all entered appearance to defend and the plaintiff
applied for summary judgment, and the defendants filed affidavits

opposing the application.
[3]
The first point raised by the defendants is that the plaintiff is
non-suited in these proceedings because section 129 of the
National
Credit Act, Act 34 of 2005 (hereinafter referred to as

the
NCA’),
has
not been complied with.
[4]
Mr Van den Berg, who appeared on behalf of the plaintiff, argued that
the NCA is not applicable in this case
alternatively
that section 129 was in fact complied
with.
[5]
The applicability of the NCA to juristic persons is provided for in
section 41(a) and (b) of the NCA, which reads as follows:

Subject
to sections (5) and (6) this Act applies to every credit agreement
between parties dealing at arms length and made within
or having an
effect within, the Republic, except-
(a)
A credit agreement in terms of which the consumer is-
(i)
A juristic person whose asset value or annual turnover together with
the combined asset value or annual turnover of all related
juristic
persons at the time the agreement is made equals or exceeds the
threshold value determined by the Minister in terms of
section 7(1);
(ii)
...
(iii)...
(b)
A large agreement, as described in section 9(4) in terms of which the
consumer is a juristic person whose asset value or annual
turnover is
at the time the agreement is made below the threshold value
determined by the Minister in terms of section 7(1).”
[5]
The threshold value determined by the Minister in terms of section
7(1) is a million rands as determined by the Minister in
Government
Notice 713 in Government Gazette 28893 of 1 June 2006.
[6]
Section 9(4) defines a large agreement as including a mortgage
agreement (irrespective of its size).
[8]
The alleged outstanding amount is due in terms of a mortgage loan
which renders it a iarge agreement owed by a juristic person.
I
therefore conclude that the National Credit Act is not applicable to
the loan advanced by the plaintiff to the first defendant.
It is
therefore unnecessary for me to decide whether section 129 has been
complied with.
[9]
The second point raised by the defendants is that the amount claimed
is

not
liquid”.
This
is explained by the defendants on the basis that the principal debtor
has three accounts with the plaintiff under the following
account
numbers:
9.1.
[………………….];
9.2.
[………………….]; and
9.3.
[………………….].
[10]
The amount claimed, so the defendants contend, is the aggregate owing
on all three accounts and the amount outstanding is not
owing on
account […….]; on which the plaintiff’s claim is
ostensibly based. Since payments were made on the
other accounts in
excess of the principal debtor’s monthly obligations, such
excess ought to have been allocated to this
account, which, I assume
they contend
:
would render the account not in arrears.
[11]
A liquidated amount in money"
as
required by Rule 32(1 )(b) is an amount which is either agreed upon
or which is capable of speedy and prompt ascertainment. (See
Lester
investments (Ptv) Ltd v Narshi
1951
(2) SA 464
(C); Fatti’s Engineering Co (Ptv) Ltd v Vendick
Spares (Ptv) Ltd
1962
(1) SA 736
(T); Botha v W Swansen & Company (Ptv) Ltd
19S8 (2) PH F 85 (CPD); Commercial Bank
of Namibia Ltd v Trans
Continental
Trading Namibia
1992
(2) SA 66
(NmHC).)
[12]
The plaintiff’s claim in this case is based on the amount
outstanding in terms of a mortgage bond and is claimable by
way of a
certificate of balance. A dispute as to the amount outstanding does
not render the claim illiquid for purposes of summary
judgment.
[13]
The gravamen
of
the defendants’ case on the merits is that payments made were
allocated to other accounts and ought to have been allocated
to the
accounts sued upon by the defendants herein.
[14]
The defendants do not attempt to identify such payments or quantify
which amounts ought to have been so allocated.
[15]
While it is not incumbent upon the defendant to formulate his / her
opposition to the summary judgment application with the
precision
that would be required in a plea nonetheless when he / she advances
his / her contentions in resistance to the plaintiff’s
claim he
/ she must do so with a sufficient degree of clarity to enable the
court to ascertain whether he / she has deposed to
a defence which,
if proved at the trial, would constitute a good defence to the
action. See Farlam Fichard and Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus : Superior
Court Practice
B1-222-223
[16]
In Breytenbach v Fiat
1976
(2) SA 226
(T) at 230 G - H the Full Bench of this division per
Colman J held:

It
is difficult to imagine a balder statement of the defence of payment
than that which the defendant had put forward. Payment,
it may be
remembered, is a defence in respect whereof the onus of proof at the
trial could have been on the defendant. He would
have had to deaf
with the manner in which he discharged his obligation to pay over a
period an amount of excess of R36 000.00;
or if it was his case that
a lesser sum had become payable by him, he would have had to say why.
In his affidavit he does not say
that he paid the rentals monthly as
they fell due; he does not say when or how he made the payments
relied upon or what their amounts
were. What he has really done is to
state the nature of his defence but not the facts relied upon in
support of it, which were,
presumably a series of payments by him.
The defendant does not even allege that he had paid all the rent
which according to the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim became
payable to it. He contents himself with the allegation that he had
paid the plaintiff
all that it due to it without indicating what he
concedes to have been due. ” due. ’’
[17]
The closest which the defendants came to identify those payments is a
reference to annexure “C”, a loan account
statement of
account number [………….]; which shows that
even that account is in arrears to the amount
of R82 223.73 and that
payments made into that account were not made monthly but
sporadically in round figures as and when it suited
the first
defendant to make such payments. Those payments did not bring that
account up to date. If anything, the reference to
that statement
disproves the defendant’s oniy possible defence.
[18]
Lastly it was argued on behalf of the sureties that the deeds of
suretyship do not comply with section 6 of the General Law
Amendment
Act, Act 50 of 1956, in that they do not expressly refer to the
account on which the plaintiff bases its action. All
three of the
deeds of suretyship provide as follows in the first paragraph
thereof:

In
consideration of Nedbank Limited ... allowing Square Metre
Development (Pty) Ltd ... banking facilities, subject to the terms

and conditions hereinafter set out I /we the undersigned... (name of
surety) ... bind and oblige myself / ourselves jointly as
well as
severally as surety(ies) and co-principal debtor(s) in solidum for
the repayment on demand of all or any sum or sums of
money which the
debtor may now or from time to time hereafter owe or be indebted to
the bank, its successors or assigns whether
such indebtedness be
incurred by the debtor in the debtor’s own name or in the name
of any firm under which the debtor may
be trading and whether solely
or jointly with another or others or in partnership or othewvise and
whether such indebtedness arises
from money allegedly advanced or
hereafter to be advanced or from promissory notes or bills of
exchange already or hereafter to
be made, accepted or endorsed or by
virtue of any individual joint suretyship or guarantee or bond or
pursuant to any cession or
assignment from third parties or otherwise
howsoever, including interest, discount, commission, legal costs
incurred or to be .
incurred on an attorney-client scale including
collection commission, stamps and all other necessary usual or
incidental charges
and expenses...”
[19]
The account upon which the plaintiff’s claim is based herein,
is clearly covered by the aforesaid description. It has
been held in
industrial Development Corporation of SA (Ptv) Ltd v Silver
2003 (1)
SA 365
(SCA) that even the absence of the name of the principal
debtor and the incorporation by reference to another agreement does
not
render the deed of suretyship invalid in terms of section 6 of
the General Law Amendment Act, 1956.
[20]
I find that there is no substance in this defence either.
[21]
In the premises I am of the view that summary judgment ought to be
granted in favour of the plaintiff and I make the following
order:

Summary
judgment is granted against the defendants, jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved for:
1.
Payment of the amount of R718 309.39;
2.
Interest on the aforesaid amount at the rate of 14.15% per annum
calculated daily from 2 January 2009 to date of payment;
3.
An order declaring the following mortgaged property specially
executable for the said sums and costs : Erf
[………….], Gauteng Province measuring
1040m
2
held by deed of transfer no. [………….]
subject to the conditions therein contained;
4.
Costs of suit on the scale as between attorney and client to be taxed
plus Sheriff’s charges and collection commission
as provided
for in the mortgage bond.’’
P.
ELLIS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT