Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 428South Africa
EPCM Consultants SA (Pty) Ltd and Another v Guardrisk Insurance Co Ltd and Others (52933/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 428 (6 May 2025)
Headnotes
liable. 15 EPCM Tanzania approached the court in Tanzania on 8 April 2025 to restrain SCB Tanzania from honouring TSK’s demand for payment. EPCM Tanzania sought relief pending the hearing of the petition inter parte. SCB Tanzania was cited as the second respondent in the proceedings. 16 Guardrisk sent SCB Tanzania an e-mail at 12:27 on 8 April 2025, advising SCB Tanzania that the applicants were in court for an interdict. SCB Tanzania replied to Guardrisk at 13:22, stating that SCB Tanzania were obliged to pay TSK on demand absent a court order stopping SCB Tanzania from making the payment. SCB Tanzania continued that the process for obtaining an injunction was not sufficient justification for SCB Tanzania to delay making the payment.
Judgment
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## EPCM Consultants SA (Pty) Ltd and Another v Guardrisk Insurance Co Ltd and Others (52933/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 428 (6 May 2025)
EPCM Consultants SA (Pty) Ltd and Another v Guardrisk Insurance Co Ltd and Others (52933/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 428 (6 May 2025)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No: 52933/2025
Reportable: No
Of interest to other
Judges: No Revised: No
Date: 6 May 2025
In the matter between:
EPCM CONSULTANTS SA (PTY)
LTD
1st Applicant
EPCM TANZANIA SA (PTY)
LTD
2nd Applicant
and
GUARDRISK INSURANCE CO
LTD 1st
Respondent
STANDARD CHARTERED BANK
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD 2nd Respondent
STANDARD CHARTERED BANK
TANZANIA LTD
3rd Respondent
TSK TANZANIA COMPANY
LTD
4th Respondent
# JUDGEMENT
JUDGEMENT
#
MOOKI J
1
The applicants seek to interdict the first
respondent, Guardrisk, from making a payment to the second respondent
(SCB SA) or to
the third respondent (SCB Tanzania) of amounts
guaranteed in terms of a performance counter-guarantee or making a
payment in terms
of an advance payment counter-guarantee. The
interdict is sought pending finalisation of a dispute between the
second applicant
(EPCM Tanzania)
and
the fourth respondent (TSK). The applicants sought relief on an
urgent basis.
2
The applicants sought leave to amend their
notice of motion when the matter was called for a hearing. The
application was made from
the bar. Guardrisk, SCB SA and SCB Tanzania
opposed the amendment. The court refused the application.
3
The first applicant (EPCM SA) and Guardrisk
concluded an indemnity agreement in terms of which Guardrisk would
issue guarantees
upon EPCM SA’s request. EPCM SA became
obliged, as part of the arrangement, to furnish Guardrisk with
security in the form
of an indemnity and
suretyships.
4
The applicants are associate corporations.
EPCM SA is a South African registered
company.
EPCM
Tanzania
is
registered
in
Tanzania.
SCB
Tanzania and SCB SA (the
SCB parties) are also associate corporations. SCB Tanzania is
registered in Tanzania.
5
EPCM Tanzania and TSK entered an agreement
for the construction of two bagasse boilers in Tanzania. EPCM SA
requested Guardrisk
to issue guarantees to TSK in connection with the
construction contract. Guardrisk was unable to provide the guarantees
because
it is not licensed to furnish that type of security outside
South Africa. It was then arranged that SCB Tanzania would provide
TSK with the guarantees.
6
Guardrisk issued a performance
counter-guarantee and an advance payment counter-guarantee to SCB SA
on 9 January 2024. SCB Tanzania
issued an advance payment guarantee
to TSK for USD 652, 907,31 on 15 January 2024. SCB Tanzania also
issued a performance guarantee
on the same date for USD 435, 271,54.
The guarantees were payable on first
demand. Both guarantees expired on 31 January 2025. The SCB parties
concluded back-to-back
guarantees in respect of the two guarantees.
7
The obligations under the guarantees were,
generally, to be triggered as follows.
TSK
would make a demand on SCB Tanzania. SCB Tanzania would then make a
demand on SCB SA. SCB SA would make a demand on Guardrisk.
Guardrisk
in turn would look to EPCM SA.
8
EPCM SA has no privity of contract with SCB
SA, SCB Tanzania, or TSK. EPCM Tanzania only has privity of contract
with TSK. EPCM
SA does not contend for a privity of contract between
it and EPCM Tanzania for purposes of the relief sought in this
application.
9
TSK made a demand on SCB Tanzania for
payment on 27 March 2025. It sought payment in the amount of USD 425,
735.07 in respect of
the advance payment guarantee and the amount of
USD 435, 271. 54 in respect of the performance guarantee. The demand
triggered
the chain of obligations, with SCB Tanzania making a demand
on SCB SA on the same day. SCB SA made a demand on Guardrisk on 31
March 2025 in terms of the advance payment counter-guarantee.
10
Guardrisk wrote to EPCM Tanzania on 3 April
2025, informing them of the demand by TSK. Guardrisk advised that the
demands appeared
to be enforceable and that Guardrisk intended to pay
pursuant to the counter- guarantees. Guardrisk requested EPCM
Tanzania’s
feedback in relation to the demands.
11
Representatives
of
Guardrisk
and
of
EPCM
SA
met
on
the
same
day. Attorneys for Guardrisk were informed
on that day that TSK’s demands were invalid for being made
pursuant to expired
guarantees. The demand were also said to be
invalid for being fraudulent. EPCM SA wrote to Guardrisk on 3 April
2025, recording
that TSK acted fraudulently.
Guardrisk was advised that Guardrisk was
not obliged to pay SCB SA. EPCM SA also informed Guardrisk that EPCM
Tanzania would approach
a court
for
relief. Guardrisk informed EPCM SA that Guardrisk would not pay SCB
SA pending the outcome of such litigation.
12
EPCM Tanzania wrote to Guardrisk on 4 April
2025, repeating and elaborating on the contention that TSK’s
demands were invalid.
EPCM Tanzania
wrote
that
the
demands
referenced
guarantees
that
were extended to 31 May 2025, instead of
guarantees issued on 5 February 2025 in terms of which the
performance guarantee was extended
to 30 June
2027 and the advance payment guarantee was
extended to 30 June 2025. EPCM Tanzania urged the guarantor to reject
TSK’s demand.
13
Guardrisk wrote to SCB SA on 4 April 2025,
recording the allegations concerning TSK. Guardrisk requested
confirmation that SCB SA
would not require Guardrisk to pay in terms
of the counter-guarantees pending the intended litigation and that no
interest would
be charged. Guardrisk’s attorneys informed the
applicants’ attorneys on 7 April 2025 that
Guardrisk would not pay SCB SA pending the
hearing of the urgent application.
14
The applicants say TSK’s demands were
fraudulent because, to the knowledge of TSK, EPCM Tanzania had
executed 90% of the works
allocated
to it by TSK and, in doing so, had repaid the advance payment
guarantee. The further basis to the stated fraud was that
TSK knew
that EPCM Tanzania had not breached the contract and there were no
outstanding works that EPCM Tanzania failed to execute
and for which
EPCM Tanzania could be held liable.
15
EPCM Tanzania approached the court in
Tanzania on 8 April 2025 to restrain SCB Tanzania from honouring
TSK’s demand for payment.
EPCM Tanzania sought relief pending
the hearing of the petition
inter parte
.
SCB Tanzania was cited as the second
respondent in the proceedings.
16
Guardrisk sent SCB Tanzania an e-mail at
12:27 on 8 April 2025, advising SCB Tanzania that the applicants were
in court for an interdict.
SCB Tanzania replied to Guardrisk at
13:22, stating that SCB Tanzania were obliged to pay TSK on demand
absent a court order stopping
SCB Tanzania from making the payment.
SCB Tanzania continued that the process for obtaining an injunction
was not sufficient justification
for SCB Tanzania to delay making the
payment.
17
SCB Tanzania paid TSK the amount of USD 861
006.61 on the guarantees at about 14:30 on 8 April 2025. There was no
court order by
that time. SCB SA in turn paid SCB Tanzania the same
amount on the same date. This was consequent to the SCB parties’
back-to-back
guarantees.
18
Guardrisk wrote to EPCM SA on 12 April
2025, advising that SCB SA’s demands under the
counter-guarantees were compliant demands
and that Guardrisk intended
to pay SCB SA on 14 April 2025. Guardrisk also demanded payment by
EPCM SA and by the sureties pursuant
to the indemnity and the deeds
of suretyship.
19
Guardrisk made its case as follows. It
contended that the applicants do not allege that SCB SA’s
demand on Guardrisk was fraudulent
or defective. The allegation is
that TSK’s demand to SCB Tanzania was fraudulent. There was no
basis to interdict Guardrisk
absent SCB SA’s demand being
defective. Guardrisk also contended that it was impermissible for the
applicants to interpose
the quarrel between EPCM Tanzania and TSK as
a reason for Guardrisk not paying SCB SA pursuant to the
counter-guarantees.
20
It was denied on behalf of Guardrisk that
the guarantees had expired. It was pointed out that TSK indicated on
14 January 2025 that
the guarantees needed to be extended and that
TSK would call on the guarantees absent their extension within 15
days before the
expiry date of 31 January 2025.
21
Guardrisk contends that clause 3 of the
deed of indemnity obliges EPCM SA to pay on first written demand of
any amount of money
which Guardrisk may be called upon to pay. EPCM
SA was obliged to pay notwithstanding whether EPCM SA admitted the
validity of
a claim against Guardrisk.
22
Guardrisk also says the applicants do
not meet the requirements for an interdict. It contended that EPCM
Tanzania will not suffer
prejudice, as EPCM Tanzania was neither a
surety nor had to indemnify any party. Guardrisk had already called
on EPCM SA to perform,
with the result that Guardrisk need only
institute collections proceedings, during which EPMC SA would raise
any defence available
to it.
23
The
SCB parties raised several defences, including the following. They
attacked the applicants’ standing, pointing out that
the
applicants have no legal interest in the contract between Guardrisk
and SCB SA. The court was referred to the decision in United
Watch &
Diamond Co (Pty) Ltd and
Others
v Disa Hotels Ltd and Another
[1]
in
this regard. The applicants were also said not to have met the
requirements for the grant of an interdict, including on account
of
the applicants having an alternative remedy which EPCM Tanzania had
already invoked; namely referring its dispute with TSK to
arbitration.
Analysis
24
The applicants contend that TSK’s
demand was invalid on two bases. First, the guarantees had expired
when TSK made the demand
on 27 March 2025. Second, TSK’s demand
was fraudulent. The fraud barred Guardrisk from paying SCB SA. The
fraud also barred
Guardrisk from having to look to EPCM SA pursuant
to the indemnity and suretyship agreements.
25
The applicants alleged fraud on the
following bases. TSK raised “back charges” equal to
amounts that had been certified
for payment to EPCM Tanzania. The
applicants contended that TSK was not entitled to raise
“back charges.” The applicants
also contended that EPCM Tanzania had repaid the advance payments
made to it because
EPCM Tanzania had completed 90% of the allocated
work.
26
EPCM Tanzania had, before TSK’s
demand on 27 March 2025, referred a dispute against TSK to
arbitration in terms of the dispute
procedure provided for in the
parties’ contract. EPCM Tanzania is claiming some USD 10
million in those proceedings.
27
The applicants say they are entitled to
relief because TSK was paid under the guarantees despite Guardrisk
and the SCB parties being
aware of the allegations of invalidity of
the guarantees and of fraud concerning TSK. Guardrisk and the SCB
parties deny that the
applicants are entitled to relief. They put up
various defences in this regard, including as detailed above.
28
SCB Tanzania issued an amendment to the
performance guarantee and the advance payment guarantee on 22 January
2025, extending their
respective expiry dates to 31 May 2025. The
quantum of the advance payment guarantee was amended to USD 425,
735.05.
29
TSK made a demand on the guarantees on 28
January 2025. The demand was made pursuant to guarantees set to
expire on 31 January 2025.
EPCM SA applied to Guardrisk on 29 January
2025 for Guardrisk to procure a further extension of the guarantees
and an increase
of the quantum of the advance payment guarantee.
Guardrisk advised TSK in writing on 30 January 2025 that EPCM SA had
requested
an extension of the performance guarantee to June 2027 and
that of the advance payment guarantee to June 2025. TSK advised SCB
Tanzania that TSK had withdrawn its demand made on 28 January 2025.
The advise was made on 30 January 2025. The withdrawal letter
is
dated 29 January 2025.
30
SCB Tanzania issued an amendment to the
performance guarantee and the advance payment guarantee on 5 February
2025. The expiry date
of the performance guarantee was extended to 30
June 2027. The expiry date of the advance payment bond was extended
to 30 June
2025. SCB Tanzania, also on 5 February 2025, instructed
TSK to ignore the amendment of 22 January 225 amending the value and
that
the value of the advance payment guarantee remained USD 652,
907.31.
31
The applicants are required to demonstrate
a
prima facie
right to succeed.
They made their case as
follows in relation to this requirement. They contend that “SCB’s”
demand for payment
in terms of the counter-guarantee is impermissible
because the guarantees that informed the demand had expired; that
“SCB”
could not have paid the demands by TSK given the
serious allegations made by ECPM Tanzania; that SCB should not
benefit from its
own unconscionable conduct, and that SCB was not
entitled to be reimbursed for satisfying fraudulent demands.
32
It is unclear what, precisely, is the
“right” which the applicants invoke for the relief being
sought. Their pleaded
case is a criticism of the SCB parties. What is
clear, however, is that whatever the right which the applicants
contend for, the
vindication of such a right is not advanced with
reference
to
Guardrisk. The right which the applicants contend for is referenced
in relation to SCB, on account of the conduct of the SCB
parties. The
applicants criticise the conduct of the SCB parties yet seek the
court to interdict Guardrisk from performing under
the
counter-guarantees.
33
The applicants have no privity of contract
with SCB SA, the entity which relationship with Guardrisk the
applicants seek to disturb.
The SCB parties are correct that the
applicants have not shown a legal interest as regards dealings
between Guardrisk and SCB SA.
34
The applicants do not allege any wrongdoing
by Guardrisk. The applicants have not shown a cognisable right as
between the applicants
and Guardrisk to warrant an interdict. The
right being invoked as the basis for an interdict must be in relation
to a party which
the court is asked to constrain. The applicants’
failure to establish a right as against Guardrisk for the grant of
the relief
sought is fatal to the application.
35
The applicants did not show that the
balance of convenience favours the grant of an interdict.
The applicants’ pleaded case on this
requirement is that “SCB” will not suffer undue hardship
or prejudice by
having to await the finalisation of arbitration
proceedings between EPCM Tanzania and
TSK
before SCB would become entitled to recoup its payments. The
applicants also say that SCB is a significant organisation with
an
international footprint, and that SCB can easily absorb the
inconvenience of not sitting with the money pending the finalisation
of the arbitration, in contrast to “EPCM” and its
sureties. The applicants then make plain that the balance of
convenience
“favours EPCM (sic) as opposed to SCB.” The
applicants are required to show that the balance of convenience
favours
them, as opposed to Guardrisk. That is because the applicants
seek to interdict Guardrisk.
The
applicants thus failed to establish that the balance of convenience
favours the grant of an interdict. This too is fatal to
their
application.
36
The applicants’ pleaded case on the
requirement for alternative relief and that of irreparable harm are
run together. There
is no delineation as to which averments are meant
to support each of these requirements. Indeed, they present this part
of their
case under the heading “No appropriate alternative
remedy and irreparable harm.”
37
They make their case as follows. They say
that TSK is an empty vessel and that EPCM Tanzania has very little
chance of recovering
the USD 10 million in
respect of
submitted claims
and
the
amounts
paid
by SCB
to
TSK.
They
also say that TSK has the propensity for fraud and that there is
little chance of EPCM recovering its losses.
38
EPCM Tanzania has instituted arbitration
proceedings in relation to its dispute with TSK. The fact of TSK
being an empty vessel,
as claimed by the applicants, does not
establish either the absence of alternative relief or show the
presence of irreparable harm.
The applicants cannot seek the
intervention of the court for having contracted with a man of straw,
whom the applicants now say
has a propensity for fraud. The
applicants failed to establish the absence of an alternative remedy.
They also did not show that
they stand to suffer irreparable harm
absent an interdict.
39
The applicants raise fraud and the stated
expiry of the guarantees as the crux of their case. The substance of
the fraud contended
for is that TSK raised “back charges”
contrary to the contract; that EPCM Tanzania had repaid the advance
payment,
and that EPCM Tanzania had not breached the contract with
TSK.
40
The applicants do not impute fraud on the
part of Guardrisk. They do not suggest that Guardrisk, in making a
demand on EPCM SA and
in signifying its intention to pay SCB SA under
the counter-guarantees, did so fraudulently or with knowledge of any
fraud.
The
applicants, instead, say “SCB” acted with knowledge of
fraud by TSB.
41
The applicants say “SCB” was
aware of the invalidity and fraudulent nature of TSK’s demands
before paying TSK,
and that SCB’s conduct was unconscionable
because SCB paid whilst being aware that EPCM would be approaching a
court to pronounce
on the legitimacy of TSK’s demands. The
applicants say that SCB is not entitled to be re-imbursed for
satisfying fraudulent
demands.
The
contentions regarding the SCB parties are of no moment in this
application. That is because the applicants do not seek to interdict
the SCB parties.
42
The
applicants accept that the guarantees pursuant to which SCB Tanzania
paid TSK are demand guarantees.
An
inherent characteristic of these guarantees is that a beneficiary is
entitled to payment on demand. The law recognises what is
called the
‘fraud exception’ as an instance where a demand guarantee
can be resisted.
[2]
The
applicants say the exception applies to the present case.
43
It was submitted for the applicants that
“fraud unravels all”, with the result that Guardrisk is
not to be allowed to
act pursuant to the terms of the
counter-guarantees and to pay SCB SA. This, according to the
applicants, is the effect of the
fraud by TSK travelling up the chain
of obligations. The principle that fraud unravels all is part of our
law. The applicants would
misapply the principle in these
proceedings.
44
The
exception to liability arising from fraud was laid out in
United
City Merchants
(Investments)
Ltd
and
others
v
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
and
others
[3]
in
a
speech
by
Lord
Diplock
that
“’…fraud
unravels
all’.
The
courts
will not allow their process to be used by a dishonest person to
carry out a fraud.”
[4]
This
statement has been received as part of our law.
[5]
45
The applicants seek to interdict Guardrisk.
They disavow any fraud on the part of Guardrisk.
The case presented for adjudication by the
applicants does not entail this court having its process being used
by a dishonest person
to carry out a fraud. The fraud exception is
not applicable, given the case as pleaded by the applicants.
46
The case for the applicants is that the
fraud contended for came about
when
TSK misrepresented facts to SCB Tanzania, leading to the latter
making payment to TSK under the guarantees. The issue of
misrepresentation
of facts will apply as between TSK and SCB
Tanzania. It has no bearing on the relationship between SCB SA and
Guardrisk. It also
has no bearing on the relationship between
Guardrisk and EPCM SA.
The
counter-guarantees that inform the relationship between Guardrisk and
EPCM SA are principal obligations in relation to the performance
of
such obligations.
47
There
is no support for the submission on behalf of the applicants that the
effect of the stated fraud travels up the chain of obligations.
The
applicants did not cite any authority for their proposition. The
established law on the nature of demand guarantees is that
the
relationship entails
irrevocable
obligations. It is only in clear cases of fraud of which banks have
notice
of
fraud that courts may interfere.
[6]
The applicants seek to interdict Guardrisk. They do not allege fraud
by Guardrisk, nor do they allege Guardrisk having acted with
knowledge of a fraud having been committed.
48
The applicants have not made-out a case for
the application of the fraud exception even if it were competent for
the applicants
to raise that defence against Guardrisk.
The
evidence does not show the existence of “a clear
case of
fraud.” This is borne by EPCM Tanzania’s averments in its
petition before the court in Tanzania.
49
The petition in
proceedings in the court in Tanzania shows parties in a dispute about
performance of obligations in terms of a contract.
EPCM Tanzania
complained, among others, that it (i.e. EPCM Tanzania) performed in
terms of the contract, whereas TSK raised unsupported
allegations of
non-compliance by EPCM Tanzania.
EPCM Tanzania
then pointed out that TSK was, in fact, the party that failed to meet
its obligations, including TSK not paying in
accordance with payment
certificates. EPCM Tanzania also referenced disagreements regarding
whether equipment was used as claimed.
50
The applicants did not make out a case that
TSK relied on expired guarantees when TSK made its demand on 27 March
2025.
SCB
Tanzania wrote to TSK on 22 January 2025, confirming that the
guarantees had been amended. The value of the advance payment
guarantee was changed from USD 652, 907,31 to USD 425, 735.07. There
was no change to the value of the performance guarantee. The
expiry
dates for both guarantees was extended to 31 May 2025. TSK made a
demand in terms of the guarantees advised on 22 January
2025.
51
TSK wrote to SCB Tanzania on 25 January
2025, recording that it could not allow the existing guarantees to
expire and that TSK had
no alternative but to submit letters of
demand. The existing guarantees were due to expire on 31 January
2025. TSK made a demand
on 28 January 2025.
52
EPCM SA applied to Guardrisk on 29 January
2025 for Guardrisk to procure the further extension of the guarantees
and an increase
of the quantum of the advance payment guarantee. SCB
Tanzania wrote to TSK on 29 January 2025, recording that the amended
advance
payment guarantee had been presented to TSK for acceptance.
EPCM Tanzania wrote to TSK on 29 January 2025, recording, among
others,
that:
Further in response to
your points we would like to clarify that the Guarantees are indeed
valid now until end of May, hence they
remain in full effect. […].
We therefore request that the call on the bonds be retracted, as they
remain in full effect
while we are getting the extensions done as per
the above. We will respond shortly with the necessary proof that this
is in action.
53
Guardrisk confirmed to TSK on 30 January
2025 that EPCM SA had requested an extension of the performance
guarantee to June 2027
and that of the advance payment guarantee to
June 2025. TSK advised SCB Tanzania on 30 January 2025 that TSK had
withdrawn the
demand it made on 28 January 2025. TSK’s
withdrawal letter was dated 29 January 2025.
54
TSK was adamant on 25 January 2025 that it
could not allow the
guarantees
to lapse. TSK’s demand on 28 January 2025 was on guarantees due
to expire on 31 January 2025. The demand was clearly
made to preserve
the currency of those guarantees, by making a demand within the
expiration period. TSK withdrew the demand on
30 January 2025, a day
before the scheduled expiry date of 31 January 2025.
55
TSK would not have notified withdrawal of
its demands if the guarantees were still to expire on 31 January
2025. It would make no
sense for TSK to withdraw its demand if the
dates of guarantees due to expire on 31 January 2025 had not been
extended given TSK’s
expressed concern on 25 January 2025 that
it could not allow the guarantees to lapse.
56
EPCM Tanzania wrote to TSK on 29 January
2025, clarifying that “
Guarantees
are indeed valid now until end of May.”
TSK
wrote on the same day that it had withdrawn its demand. Thus TSK
withdrew its demand on
an
understanding that the guarantees were valid “until the end of
May.”
57
I find that the guarantees had not expired
when TSK made its demands on 27 March 2025. The applicants cannot
succeed in this application
even if
the
court be in error in its finding that the guarantees had not expired.
The application must fail because the applicants did not
meet the
requirements for
an
interdict,
as
detailed
above.
Guardrisk
and
the
SCB
parties
raised
several other defences. It is unnecessary to address those defences
in the
light of
the court’s findings in this judgement.
58
I make the following order:
(1)
The application is urgent.
(2)
The application is dismissed.
(3)
The applicants are ordered to pay costs:
58.3.1
Costs in
relation to the first respondent includes costs for engaging senior
counsel, on scale C.
58.3.2
Costs in
relation to the second and third respondents include costs for
engaging two counsel, including senior counsel; such costs
to be on
scale C in relation to senior counsel and scale B in relation to
junior counsel.
O MOOKI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Heard: 28 April 2025
Decided: 6 May 2025
Counsel for the
applicants:
P L Uys
Instructed
by:
Gildenhuys Malatji Inc.
Counsel for the first
respondent:
I Green SC
Instructed
by:
Clyde & Co Attorneys
Counsel for the second
and third respondents: J P V McNally SC (together with M
J
Cooke)
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel
[1]
1972
(4) SA 409
( C) at 416H to 417D
[2]
See
Loomcraft Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd and Another (70/94)
[1995] ZASCA
127
, which details the law on the subject.
[3]
[1982]
2 All ER 720 (HL)
[4]
At
725 J
[5]
See
Loomcraft Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd and Another.
[6]
R
D Harbottle (Mercantile) Ltd and another v National Westminster Bank
Ltd and others
[1977] 2 All ER 862
(QB) at 870 b - d
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