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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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Trinity Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty) Ltd

Citation(1040/2015) [2016] ZASCA 135 (29 September 2016)
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Prescription
Contract Law
Corporate Insolvency

Facts of the Case

The appellant (Trinity) lent the respondent (Grindstone) R3 050 000 pursuant to a written loan agreement dated 1 September 2007. Clause 2.3 stipulated that "The Loan Capital shall be due and payable to the Lender within 30 days from the date of delivery of the Lender's written demand." The money was paid in three tranches in February 2008: R1.5 million on 13 February, R1 million on 15 February, and R500 000 on 21 February 2008. The agreement also provided for a second mortgage bond to be registered as security, but this never occurred. On 19 September 2013, Trinity's CEO sent an email enquiring about settlement. On 25 September 2013, Grindstone's director confirmed the outstanding balance of R4.55 million and stated funds would be released within 60-90 days. No payment was made. On 9 December 2013, Trinity served a section 345 letter of demand claiming R4.6 million. Grindstone denied liability. Trinity then applied for provisional liquidation of Grindstone. Grindstone raised prescription as a defence.

Legal Issues

  • When does a debt become 'due' for purposes of prescription where it is repayable on demand?
  • Does a contractual requirement for written demand on 30 days' notice constitute a condition precedent or suspensive condition such that prescription only begins to run from the date of demand?
  • Can a creditor by its own conduct (or omission to demand payment) postpone the commencement of prescription?
  • Did the section 345 Companies Act demand comply with the contractual requirement of 30 days' written notice?

Judicial Outcome

The appeal was dismissed with costs. The majority found the debt had prescribed and was extinguished in February 2011, three years after the loan was advanced in February 2008. The minority would have upheld the appeal.

Ratio Decidendi

A debt that is repayable on demand becomes 'due' for purposes of section 11(d) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 at the moment the money is lent to the debtor, not when demand for repayment is made. A contractual provision requiring written demand on notice (such as 30 days' notice) is ordinarily a procedural term regarding when the debt becomes 'payable', not a condition precedent or suspensive condition for the debt to become 'due'. The concepts of 'claimability' and 'payability' are distinct: a debt can be immediately claimable even though demand may be necessary for it to be payable. A creditor cannot, by its own conduct or failure to make demand, postpone the commencement of prescription. Prescription therefore begins to run from the date the loan is advanced, not from the date demand is made, unless there is clear indication that the parties intended demand to be a condition precedent for the debt to become due.

Obiter Dicta

Willis JA noted (without finally deciding) the tension between freedom of contract and the strict policy considerations underlying South Africa's rigorous prescription law, particularly regarding Professor Loubser's proposition that courts will require clear indication that parties intended demand to be a condition precedent before prescription will run from the date of demand. Willis JA suggested the legal community would benefit from further scholarly contributions on this issue. The majority also noted that the section 345 Companies Act demand (giving 21 days) failed to comply strictly with the contractual requirement of 30 days' notice in clause 2.3, and commented on the doctrine requiring strict compliance with conditions precedent (fulfillment in forma specifica). The judgment also discussed the principle that contracts should be interpreted so that no clause is superfluous. The minority judgment emphasized the importance of commercial context and the parties' intention to secure the loan with a mortgage bond as indicators of their intention regarding when the debt would become due.

Legal Significance

This case is significant for clarifying the distinction between when a debt becomes 'due' for prescription purposes versus when it becomes 'payable'. It reinforces the principle that prescription runs from when a debt is lent in loan-on-demand situations, regardless of contractual provisions requiring notice before payment becomes payable. The judgment emphasizes that creditors cannot delay the commencement of prescription by their own inaction. It provides important guidance on the interpretation of standard 'repayable on demand' clauses in commercial loan agreements. The case also demonstrates the strict approach to prescription under the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 (which creates 'strong' prescription whereby debts are extinguished, not merely rendered unenforceable). The distinction between procedural terms and conditions precedent in contracts is clarified. The case has practical implications for financial institutions and lenders regarding the importance of making timely demands and not delaying enforcement of loan agreements.

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This case references

Applies

  • Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality(920/2010) [2012] ZASCA 13 (15 March 2012)

Cites

  • Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality(920/2010) [2012] ZASCA 13 (15 March 2012)

Referenced by

Appeal From By

  • Trinity Asset Management (Pty) Limited v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty) Limited[2017] ZACC 32

Applied By

  • Amardien and Others v Registrar of Deeds and Others[2018] ZACC 47
  • Glenwin Frieslaar NO and Others v Petrus Andre Ackerman and Another(1242/2016) [2017] ZASCA 03 (02 February 2018)

Cited By

  • SA Airlink (Pty) Ltd v South African Airways (SOC) Limited (in Business Rescue) and Others(238/2020) [2020] ZASCA 156
  • Amardien and Others v Registrar of Deeds and Others[2018] ZACC 47

Considers By

  • Trinity Asset Management (Pty) Limited v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty) Limited[2017] ZACC 32
  • Tight Business Enterprises CC v Petrus Johannes Lordan NO & Others[2025] ZASCA 133 (17 September 2025)

Distinguished By

  • SA Airlink (Pty) Ltd v South African Airways (SOC) Limited (in Business Rescue) and Others(238/2020) [2020] ZASCA 156
  • Tight Business Enterprises CC v Petrus Johannes Lordan NO & Others[2025] ZASCA 133 (17 September 2025)

Followed By

  • Glenwin Frieslaar NO and Others v Petrus Andre Ackerman and Another(1242/2016) [2017] ZASCA 03 (02 February 2018)