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[2009] ZANCHC 58
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ABSA Bank Ltd v Woulec Toerusting Trust (1131/08) [2009] ZANCHC 58 (24 April 2009)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[
Northern
Cape High Court, Kimberley]
Case
no: 1131/08
Date
heard: 2009-04-17
Date
delivered: 2009-04-24
In
the matter of
:
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
APPLICANT
versus
WOULEC
TOERUSTING TRUST DEFENDANT
Coram:
MAJIEDT
AJP
JUDGMENT
MAJIEDT
AJP:
The
Plaintiff applies for summary judgment
,
having issued summons against the Defendant, a trust, for the
delivery of 110 chemical toilets.
The
Defendant has opposed the summary judgment application and has
raised a number of preliminary defences
additional
to its defence on the merits. I propose dealing with the
preliminary defences first and foremost before deciding whether
the
Defendant has raised a valid
bona
fide
defence/s
to the claim.
The
Plaintiffâs claim is based upon a credit agreement, which is
Annexure B to the particulars of claim. Annexure A to the
summons
is a description of the goods, namely the 110 chemical toilets. I
shall allude to this particular matter later again
herein.
4.1 An
aspect which I must emphasize at the outset is the fact that the
Defendant has the tendency of putting up its defence in
heads
of argument rather than in its opposing affidavit. Rule 32(3)(b)
requires a defendant to âsatisfy the court by
affidavit
(of
its defence)â.
4.2 Any
submissions in heads of argument not supported by averments in an
opposing affidavit must, in my view, simply be regarded
as
pro
non scripto
.
4.3 So, for
example the Defendant:
(a) did
not allude at all to any prejudice which it has suffered due to the
early setdown of the application; instead a vague and
unconvincing
complaint of lack of time to fully prepare a proper defence is made
in the heads of argument;
(b) introduced
facts with regard to the identification of the goods (the chemical
toilets) in the heads of argument, whereas nothing
at all was adduced
in that regard in the opposing affidavit; and
(c) broached
a point
in
limine
not taken at all in the opposing affidavit, namely that the summons
was not signed by an attorney admitted and enrolled to practise
in
this Division, for the first time in the heads of argument.
4.4 The
approach
which I have taken in this judgment is to disregard
in
toto
those contentions raised in the written heads of argument and in oral
argument, which are not supported by averments in the opposing
affidavit.
5.1
The
first preliminary aspect raised by the Defendant in its opposing
affidavit, is that the Plaintiff has not complied with the
provisions
of Uniform Rule 32(2), having set the matter down nine days from date
of delivery, instead of 10 days as required by
the Rule.
Rule 32(2)
provides that:
â
The
plaintiff shall within 15 days after the date of delivery of notice
of intention to defend, deliver notice of application for
summary
judgment, together with an affidavit made by himself or by any other
person who can swear positively to the facts verifying
the cause of
action and the amount, if any, claimed and stating that in his
opinion there is no
bona
fide
defence
to the action and that notice of intention to defend has been
delivered solely for the purpose of delay. If the claim is
founded
on a liquid document a copy of the document shall be annexed to such
affidavit and the notice of application for summary
judgment shall
state that the application will be set down for hearing on a stated
day not being less than 10 days from the date
of the delivery
thereof.â
5.2
Courts
are empowered to condone non-compliance with the Rules. In
Papenfus
v Nichas and Son (Pty) Ltd
1969(4) SA 234 (O) the Court condoned a short period of setdown
in circumstances similar to the present, namely where the
matter was
set down one day short calculated from the date of service of the
application. In the papers before me there is an
affidavit by a
clerk employed by the Appellantâs attorneys, who alluded to the
fact that she had attempted to deliver the application
to the
Defendantâs attorneys on 26 September 2008 during the afternoon,
but was unable to do so, since the office was closed.
The
application was therefore delivered at 08:15 am on 29 September 2008.
As a consequence the application was, as I have stated,
set down
nine days after date of delivery.
I
am of the view that
this
defect has not caused any prejudice to the Defendant and that I
should consequently condone the non-compliance with the Rule
with
regard to the days of setdown of the summary judgment application.
No prejudice has, in any event, been averred by the
Defendant â it
merely records in the opposing affidavit the fact of the early
setdown.
The
second point
in
limine
taken
by the Defendant is that the description of the movable goods lacks
particularity so as to enable the Defendant to identify
it. This
point actually impacts on the very merits itself. I was referred by
Mr. Anderson for the Defendant to the decision
of
All
Purpose Space Heating Co. of SA (Pty) Ltd v Schweltzer
1970(3)
SA 560 (D) at 564-5. With regard to the provisions contained
in Rule 32(1)(c), the summons must specify with sufficient
particularity for purposes of identification from the description
given in the summons, the movable property which is sought
to be
delivered. In the present instance, the goods were described in
Annexure A to the summons as follows:
â
THE
GOODS
2006 110 CHEMIESE TOILETTE
SERIAL NUMBER : TBAâ
When one examines
Annexure B to the summons, namely the tax invoice in respect of the
written credit agreement between the parties,
relied upon by the
Plaintiff, the goods are described as follows:
â
Beskrywing van goedere: 110
CHEMIESE TOILETTE
Jaar van eerste registrasie: 2006
Reeksnommer:
TBAâ
On
behalf of the Plaintiff, Mr. Wijnbeek has argued that this
description of the goods is sufficiently compliant with Rule
32(1)(c).
I disagree. I
find it hard to imagine how a Sheriff, acting on a writ of execution
in respect of this claim, would be able to identify which
chemical
toilets he/she would have to attach to satisfy the writ. To
illustrate: how would the Sheriff distinguish these 110
toilets
from other toilets of similar appearance? The serial number âTBAâ
is quite unhelpful and so too is the year of manufacture.
In his
heads of argument Mr. Anderson has submitted that these chemical
toilets are mounted on trailers which are registered
road users with
a chassis number and registration numbers and letters. As I have
already stated in par. 4.4 above, I have
completely disregarded
these contentions, since they were not contained in the opposing
affidavit. Having said that, I am satisfied
that the goods are not
described adequately so as to comply with Rule 32(1)(c). It is a
basic requirement of the
rei
vindicatio
(for
this is really what the Plaintiffâs claim entails) that the
property sought to be vindicated must be identifiable and
identified.
See: Badenhorst,
Pienaar & Mostert:
Silberberg
& Schoemanâs Law of Property
,
5
th
ed. at 244.
This decision
makes it unnecessary to deal with the further aspects, but for the
sake of completeness I intend dealing with them
in the judgment as
well.
The
next point
in
limine
is
the question of the citation of the trust. Mr. Anderson submitted
that the Plaintiff should have cited the trustees for the
time being
of the trust and not the trust itself as the Defendant.
While
it is better to cite the trustees for the time being on behalf of a
trust, there is no bar in law in citing a trust by its
name.
See
in this regard:
I.A.
Essack Family Trust v Kathree;
I.A. Essack Family Trust v Soni
1974(2) SA 300 (D).
The
general rule is that a trustee can act on behalf of a trust if he or
she is fully authorised to do so; such authority is usually
proved
by way of a resolution duly signed by all the trustees of the
particular trust.
See
in this regard:
Goolam
Ally Family Trust t/a Textile, Curtaining and Trimming v Textile,
Curtaining and Trimming (Pty) Ltd
1989(4) SA 985 (C) at 988 D-E;
Rossner
v Lydia Swanepoel
Trust
1998(2) SA 123 (W) at 127C;
Mariola
and Others v Kaye-Eddie N.O. and Others
1995(2) SA 728 (W) at 731 C-F.
An
insurmountable
problem
for the Defendant is that its averments in the opposing affidavit
was self-defeating of this particular argument. In
the opposing
affidavit, the deponent, one of the trustees of the Defendant,
namely Mr. George le Clerc Katz, stated as follows:
â
I am duly authorised to
oppose this application and to depose to this affidavit on behalf of
the Defendant in my capacity as the
trustee of the Defendant.â
The
deponent
attached
letters of authority from the Master reflecting that the trust has
two trustees. It is abundantly clear that the deponent
states under
oath that he is duly authorised to act on behalf of the trust.
Accordingly it must be assumed that he was authorised
to represent
the trust in the summary judgment proceedings. It consequently does
not behove the Defendant to raise the citation
of the trust as a
point
in
limine
and it can consequently not be upheld.
On
the merits the Defendant also disputed the authority of the person
who had concluded the agreement with the Plaintiff. It
was
further
alleged that no proof of delivery of the goods had been provided.
In this regard the Defendant pointed out that it was
not clear on
the papers whether the Plaintiff had delivered all of the goods
described in the annexures. With regard to the
goods that were in
fact delivered, he alleged that they were defective and that the
trust had a potential counterclaim in this
regard against the
Plaintiff.
A
further
defence
was raised with regard to the provisions of the
National Credit Act,
34 of 2005
. This defence was, rightly so, expressly abandoned and
it is therefore not necessary to deal with it further.
With
regard to the other
defences
set out in par. 12 above, the question arises whether these
constitute a
bona
fide
defence
in respect of the summary judgment. In the leading case of
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976(1)
SA 418 (A) at 423 F-G Corbett JA alluded to the âextraordinary
and drastic natureâ of the remedy of summary judgment.
Later, at
426A â 426E the learned Judge of Appeal said the following:
â
Accordingly,
one of the ways in which a defendant may successfully oppose a cl
aim
for summary judgment is by satisfying the Court by affidavit that he
has a bona fide defence to the claim. Where the defence
is based upon
facts, in the sense that material facts alleged by the plaintiff in
his summons, or combined summons, are disputed
or new facts are
alleged constituting a defence, the Court does not attempt to decide
these issues or to determine whether or not
there is a balance of
probabilities in favour of the one party or the other. 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
part of the claim, a defence which
is both bona fide and good in
law. If satisfied on these matters the Court must refuse summary
judgment, either wholly or in part,
as the case may be. The word
'fully', as used in the context of the Rule (and its predecessors),
has been the cause of some Judicial
controversy in the past. It
connotes, in my view, that, while the defendant need not deal
exhaustively with the facts and the evidence
relied upon to
substantiate them, he must at least disclose his defence and the
material facts upon which it is based with sufficient
particularity
and completeness to enable the Court to decide whether the affidavit
discloses a bona fide defence.â
See
further:
Tesven
CC and Another v South Africa Bank of Athens
2000(1)
SA 268 (SCA) at par. [22], 275H â 276E.
I
am of the view that there is sufficient detail provided by the
Defendant to pass muster in this regard. Quite obviously, the
Defendant would be required to amplify these allegations further at
the trial. At this juncture, however, I am satisfied that
the
issues have been raised with sufficient particularity as is required
in the Rule.
I need not even be satisfied at this stage that these defences
would in all probability succeed at the trial.
See:
Eisenbergâs
v OFS Textile Distributors (Pty) Ltd
1949(3) SA 1047 (O) at 1055.
It is well
established that a defendantâs opposing affidavit in summary
judgment proceedings is not to be assessed with the precision
required of a plea and a Court must adopt an accommodating approach
in that regard.
See:
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
supra
at 426 E;
District
Bank Ltd v Hoosain
and Others
1984(4) SA 544 (C) at 547 G-H.
Having
regard
therefore to my finding relating to the inadequate description of
the specified movable goods and with regard to the Defendantâs
bona
fide
defence,
I am of the view that this is not a case where summary judgment
should be granted and where, effectively, the doors of
the Court
should be shut to the Defendant. I am of the view that the
Defendant has an arguable case on the merits and summary
judgment
should therefore be refused.
I issue the
following order:
1
7.1 The
application for summary judgment is refused.
17.2 The
Defendant is granted leave to defend the action.
17.3 The
costs for the application for summary judgment are left over for
determination by the Trial Court.
_____________
______
SA MAJIEDT
ACTING
JUDGE
PRESIDENT
FOR
THE
APPLICANT : ADV
DH WIJNBEEK
INSTRUCTED
BY : DU TOIT â BOMELA
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF : MR WW ANDERSON
INSTRUCTED
BY : MJILA AND PARTNERS