
Subscribe & Follow
#AfricaMonth
In the news
Debt review and the National Credit Act

This was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in Ferris v FirstRand Bank Limited. Mr and Mrs Ferris were unable to repay their home loan to FirstRand Bank Limited, applied for debt review and received a debt-restructuring order. They fell behind on their payments and breached the debt-restructuring order. FirstRand issued summons for payment of the full balance of the loan, interest, and an order declaring the property specially executable. Judgment was granted. The Ferrises appealed to the Constitutional Court.
Section 88(3)(b)(ii) of the National Credit Act, 2005 precludes a credit provider from enforcing a debt that is subject to debt review unless the debtor defaults on a debt-restructuring order. The judgment was correctly granted because once the debt-restructuring order had been breached, FirstRand was entitled to enforce the loan without notice. The wording of the debt-restructuring order itself stated that the loan would be enforceable if the terms of the order were breached.
This confirms the Eastern Cape High Court judgment of FirstRand Bank Limited v Fillis which held that once the debtor has defaulted on the debt-restructuring order the credit provider is entitled "to proceed and to exercise and enforce... any right or security" under the original credit agreement.
The Ferrises unsuccessfully raised the fact that a notice for termination of debt review in terms of s86(10) of the Act was not given to them. However that notice deals with a different situation. It allows a credit provider to terminate the debt review process of a defaulting consumer by giving notice no sooner than 60 business days after the consumer applied for the debt review.
FirstRand was entitled to enforce the loan, not because the debt review proceedings had been terminated, but because the Ferrises had breached the debt-restructuring order.
The court found no evidence that the Ferrises could comply with the debt-restructuring order and the relief sought would only delay the inevitable. The application was dismissed.
If a debt-restructuring order is breached at any time, the terms and conditions of the original loan are instantly enforceable by the creditor without any further notice to the debtor.
About Yasmin Kadwa and Katrijn Thys
Yasmin Kadwa is an associate and Katrijn Thys is a candidate attorney at Norton Rose Fulbright.Related
New compulsory mediation rule faces ConCourt challenge by lawyers' association 3 days Copyright amendments to be read into Act with immediate effect - ConCourt 9 May 2025 Blind people can access copyrighted works, rules Concourt - again 17 Dec 2024 ConCourt showdown on copyright bill 23 Oct 2024 ConCourt grants extension to GNU for Marriage Act amendment 19 Sep 2024 ConCourt justice post to remain vacant as JSC lacks viable candidates 10 Apr 2024
