Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 497South Africa
Lutzkie and Others v Kilken Platinum (Pty) Ltd and Others (37252/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 497 (28 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Lutzkie and Others v Kilken Platinum (Pty) Ltd and Others (37252/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 497 (28 May 2024)
Lutzkie and Others v Kilken Platinum (Pty) Ltd and Others (37252/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 497 (28 May 2024)
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sino date 28 May 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 37252/2021
DOH:
19 - 20 September 2023
1)
REPORTABLE: NO
2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3)
REVISED.
DATE: 28 May 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
FREDERICK
WILHELM AUGUST LUTZKIE
First Applicant
NEW
SALT ROCK CITY (PTY)
LTD
Second Applicant
ZAMIEN
INVESTMENTS 102 (PTY) LTD
Third Applicant
CSHELL
80 (PTY) LTD
Fourth Applicant
And
KILKEN
PLATINUM (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
KILKEN
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
KILKEN
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
KILKEN
ENTERPRISES (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
ZUNAID
ABBAS
MOTI
Fifth Respondent
MIKAEEL
MOTI
Sixth Respondent
ASHRUF
KAKA
Seventh
Respondent
SALIM
AHMED
BOBAT
Eighth Respondent
DAVID
GAVIN WILLOUGHBY
Ninth Respondent
WIID
ROSSOUW
Tenth Respondent
ANGLO
AMERICAN PLATINUM CORPORATION LTD
Eleventh Respondent
MAHENDREN
MOODLEY
Twelfth Respondent
SEBASTIAN
(KGOSI) TSHIKARE
Thirteenth Respondent
KILKEN-
IMBALI JOINT VENTURE
Fourteenth Respondent
IMBANI
MINERALS (PTY) LTD
Fifteenth
Respondent
GLENCORE
OPERATIONS SA LIMITED
Sixteenth
Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Seventeenth Respondent
COMMISSION
JUDGMENT
THIS JUDGMENT HAS BEEN
HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY WAY OF
EMAIL / UPLOADING ON CASELINES. THE
DATE OF HAND DOWN SHALL BE DEEMED
TO BE 27 MAY 2024
BAM J
Introduction
1.
This
is a motion for final relief from oppressive or prejudicial conduct
in terms of Section 163 of the Companies Act
[1]
(the Act). The applicants seek,
inter
alia
,
an order for a mutual buyout among the two shareholder groupings,
failing, a sale by public auction of the entire shares in the
first
respondent. The matter was heard during recess in September 2023,
following a brief hiatus from May 2022 when the court ordered
that it
be removed from the roll. In terms of that court order, the
applicants were called upon to pay the respondents’ costs,
including the costs of two counsel. Over the two days of argument,
the court also heard three
[2]
further applications between the parties and reserved judgment in all
four.
2.
The applicants’ case is set out in
their founding affidavit and augmented in their supplementary
affidavits, filed as of April
and September 2023. In the main, the
complaints include,
inter alia
:
2.1 The denial by the
first to the fourth respondents (respondents) of free and unfettered
access to the first respondent’s
books of accounts, and
financial records.
2.2 Exclusion from
managing the affairs of the first respondent. This complaint includes
the respondents’ refusal to accept
the first applicant as
director of the first respondent.
2.3 The refusal of
requests or calls to hold shareholders’ meetings.
2.4 The lack of probity
on the part of the management and board of the first respondent.
2.5 The alleged
oppressive or unfairly prejudicial manner in which the affairs of the
first respondent are conducted, in disregard
of the applicants’
interest.
Since filing the
supplementary affidavits further complaints have emerged and they
include:
2.6 The discovery of
further evidence of oppressive or prejudicial conduct in the form of
allegedly hidden commercial transactions,
namely, the KCo obligation
and the Mazetti Management fees. In terms of the latter, the first
respondent paid R33 million in fees
in respect of management
services. Mazetti is an entity within the Moti Group of Companies.
3.
The applicants’ claims were met by a
defence,
in limine
,
that the applicants are bound by the alternative dispute resolution
clause set out in the first respondent’s Shareholders’
Agreement (SA). To the extent that the applicants have not made a
case demonstrating good cause, submitted the respondents, they
cannot
escape the clause.
4.
At the outset, the respondents claimed that
the application was an abuse of this court’s processes and that
the application
was not brought because the applicants are an
oppressed minority in pursuit of the truth. Rather, it was brought as
a stalking
horse to coerce the respondents to buy out the minority
shareholders at the extortionate price of R800 million, demanded by
the
first applicant. The application, so it is alleged, is part of a
series of abusive strike litigation brought to embarrass and harass
the first respondent and interfere with the commercially sensitive
relationships it enjoys with its trading partners, so as to
destroy
value in the first respondent. The abuse, the respondents submitted,
can be inferred from the applicants’ decision
to include
various respondents, against whom the applicants make no case, and
from whom they seek no relief.
5.
The respondents denied the allegations of
oppressive or prejudicial conduct and provided positive evidence
contradicting the applicants’
version. Pointing to the myriad
of irresoluble disputes of fact, they argued that the case cannot be
resolved on paper.
6.
The applicants, according to the
respondents, had unequivocally conceded that there are material
disputes of fact which cannot be
resolved on the papers. That
concession cannot be undone.
7.
There is the further point that, the
applicants exercised an election to refer the various disputes in
this matter to trial. On
that basis, they should not be allowed to
paddle two canoes at the same time. They are bound by their election
and its consequences.
The respondents asked that the matter be
referred to trial or be dismissed with punitive costs.
8.
It is now convenient to set out a high
level sketch of the background facts, but first, the parties must be
introduced. Before I
do so, I record this court’s appreciation
of the professional approach demonstrated by counsel from both sides
in preparing
a set of Comprehensive Heads of Argument, Index and
Joint Practice Notes. The assistance is greatly appreciated.
A. Parties
9.
The first applicant, Mr Frederick Wilhem
Augusta Lutzkie (Lutzkie), describes himself as a businessman, a
certified professional
electrical engineer and director of the second
applicant. He is the moving spirit behind the second to the fourth
applicants. His
address is set out in the papers as New Salt Rock,
Salt Rock, KwaZulu Natal.
10.
The second applicant is a private company
duly incorporated as such in terms of South African law with its
registered address set
out as New Salt Rock Road, Salt Rock, KwaZulu
Natal.
11.
The third and fourth applicants are private
companies and wholly owned subsidiaries of the second applicant. The
second to the fourth
applicants are referred to in the papers as the
New Salt Rock City Group of companies (Salt Rock). Together, they
hold a minority
shareholding in the first respondent to the extent of
35.1%. For ease of reference, I refer to Mr Lutzkie as Lutzkie and to
the
second to the fourth applicants as simply the applicants or Salt
Rock.
12.
The first respondent, Kilken Platinum (Pty)
Ltd, is a private company duly incorporated as such in terms of South
African law. Its
registered address is described in the papers as
Parkmore, Sandton. The main object and sole business of the first
respondent is
the treatment of low grade concentrate in terms of the
Sale and Treatment of Concentrate Agreement (STC) concluded between
it and
Rustenburg Platinum Mines, RPM, a wholly owned subsidiary of
the eleventh respondent. The business of the first respondent is
conducted
through the Kilken-Imbani Joint Venture (JV) which
comprises the first respondent and the fifteenth respondent, Imbani
Minerals
(Pty) Ltd.
13.
The second, third, and fourth respondents
are private companies. They hold the majority stake in the first
respondent of 64.9%.
The second to the fourth respondents are
referred to in the papers as the Newshelf Group of Companies (New
Shelf).
14.
The application is opposed only by the
first to the fourth respondents. Thus, a reference to the respondents
in this judgement refers
only to them. The twelfth respondent, while
not opposing the application, filed an affidavit in discharge of his
professional and
civic duties in order to bring to the attention of
the court certain pertinent matters.
B. Background
15.
The following is common cause: As at
September 2020, Salt Rock held a stake of 35.1% in the first
respondent for which it paid a
consideration of R242 million. The
purchase was made by way of a phased approach over a period of about
eight months. It is common
cause that in the lead up to purchasing
the shares, Lutzkie had a team of qualified advisors, one of whom is
the twelfth respondent.
For ease of reading, the remainder of the
background is arranged along the following headings: i) the Sec 345
Interdict; ii) concession
and election; and iii) referral to judicial
case management.
i) The Sec 345
Interdict
16.
According
to the respondents, the event that precipitated the present
application may be traced back to a meeting held on 23 June
2021
between Lutzkie and Moti
[3]
.
The meeting was held in order to find a lasting solution to the
parties’ problems by buying out the applicants’ interest.
In that meeting, Lutzkie rejected Moti’s offer — without
prejudice — to acquire the applicants’ shares.
Lutzkie
demanded that he be paid R800 million for the applicants’
shares. He threatened that if his demand was not met, he
would bring
an application in terms of sec 163 of the Act and would '
bomb
and destroy everything
’.
Lutzkie proceeded to show Moti an unissued application in terms of
Section 163 to demonstrate his seriousness. Lutzkie
and the
applicants deny the extortionate demands and the attendant threat but
maintain that the price of R800 million is not out
of synch with the
first respondent’s valuation.
17.
Moti’s
efforts to resolve the parties’ differences were a sequel to
earlier events, which saw the applicants issue a
demand in terms of
section 345 (1) of the Companies Act
[4]
,
during April 2021, arising from a dispute surrounding a short-paid
invoice
[5]
for services allegedly rendered during 2020. To prevent the
applicants from winding it up, the first respondents sought an urgent
interdict from the Durban High Court (the Sec 345 Interdict). The
application was resolved by means of a consensual order.
ii) Concession and
Election
18.
The respondents refused to capitulate to
the demand. The present application was issued on 23 July 2021 as
semi urgent, to be heard
during the court week of 31 August. The case
was called on 1 September but it was not heard. It was instead,
scheduled to be heard
on 16 February 2022. In the lead up to the
hearing in February, the parties concluded a Settlement Agreement
during October 2021,
resolving all their disputes. It was an express
term of the Settlement Agreement that the parties stop litigating
against one another,
phrased in the parties’ agreement as,
‘
Stop litigation now
’.
19.
The record suggests that on the eve of the
hearing in February 2022, the applicants sought an order referring
the various disputes
between the parties, including the question
whether a valid settlement agreement had been concluded in October
2021, to trial.
The court did not accede to this request. In its
judgment delivered in May 2022, the court found that the present
application had
been compromised/resolved by the October 2021
settlement and ordered that it be removed from the roll.
20.
It is common cause that nothing came of the
Settlement Agreement. Both parties blame the other for failing to
perform in terms thereof.
In August 2022, following the applicants’
cancellation of the Settlement Agreement in June 2022, the applicants
issued papers
to recover what they claim they were entitled to in
terms of that agreement, as a result of the respondents’
alleged failure
to perform. This application is referred to between
the parties as the Rouwkoop application. Two further applications
were issued
in August and November 2022.
iii) Referral to
Judicial Case management and subsequent events
21.
The
parties were referred to judicial case management during or about
December 2022, by which time 4 applications were pending between
them
[6]
.
Following the case management meeting of 3 April 2023, and with leave
of this court, the parties filed supplementary affidavits
to take
into account various developments that had occurred in the matter. On
7 September 2023, the respondents sought leave to
file a second
supplementary affidavit with evidence pertaining to events that took
place during April 2023, contending that they
would be prejudiced in
the event the evidence was not brought to the attention of the court.
The applicants do not oppose the application
and there is no
prejudice in that the applicants filed a reply on 12 September.
Consequently, the court grants leave for the second
supplementary
affidavit be admitted into the record.
22.
Included in the developments is the
furnishing of a large amount of records pertaining to the first
respondent to the applicants.
Indeed, it is the respondents’
version that after furnishing the information, the applicants relayed
that they were satisfied
with the information and that they had no
further questions.
C. Issues
23.
The following, according to the parties’
Joint Practice Note, must be determined, ie, whether:
a)
the applicants, as a matter of law or based
on the Memorandum of Incorporation Shareholders’ Agreement,
have a right as shareholders
to free and unfettered access to the
first respondent’s financials records;
b)
the applicants have been excluded from the
management of the first respondent and from its financial affairs;
c)
the respondents’ refusal to accept Mr
Lutzkie’s nomination to the board has any merit;
d)
Mr Lutzkie and or anyone nominated by him
was entitled to serve on the board of the first respondent;
e)
the respondents’ conduct has had a
result that is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial or that disregarded
the interests of
Salt Rock as envisaged in section 163 of the
Companies Act;
f)
a mutual buy-out of shares at a fair value
by the two shareholder groupings is to be ordered;
g)
the breakdown in the relationship between
Mr Moti and Mr Lutzkie, who are neither shareholders nor directors in
the first respondent,
render the mutual buy-out of shareholding in
the first respondent at fair value an appropriate order; and,
h)
the business of the first respondent is
being or has been carried on or conducted in a manner that is
oppressive or unfairly prejudicial
to Salt Rock or that disregards
Salt Rock’s interests.
The respondents add the
following as issues for determination, ie. whether:
i)
the disputes of fact between the parties
render the application incapable of resolution on paper;
j)
the applicants elected to refer the matter
to trial and now are bound by that election; and,
k)
the applicants’ application
constitutes an abuse of process.
D. The law
Disputes of facts in
Motion proceedings
24.
It
is trite that motion proceedings are suitable for resolution of legal
issues on common cause facts. They cannot be used to resolve
factual
disputes because they are not meant to determine probabilities.
[7]
Courts, however, have to be vigilant and not allow fictitious and
unmeritorious affidavit versions
[8]
.
It is also well established that in motion proceedings where disputes
of fact arise on the affidavits, a final order can be granted
only if
the facts averred in the applicant’s affidavit, which have been
admitted by the respondents, together with the facts
alleged by the
latter, justify such order
[9]
.
Election
25.
In
Sandown
Travel (Pty) Ltd
v
Cricket
South Africa,
the court had occasion to
comment the doctrine of election and it said:
‘
[31]
At the bottom of the doctrine of election is the principle that no
person can be allowed to take up two positions inconsistent
with one
another or, as is commonly expressed, to blow hot and cold, to
approbate and reprobate.
‘
[33]
Now, when an event occurs which entitles one party to a contract to
refuse to carry out his part of the contract, that party
has the
choice of two courses. He can either elect to take advantage of the
event or he can elect not to do so. He is entitled
to a reasonable
time in which to make up his mind, but when once he has made his
election he is bound by that election and cannot
afterwards change
his mind.’
[10]
Concession
26.
The
law on concession states that a party is bound by factual concessions
made before a court. ‘It is also trite that a party
may not
present argument in conflict with those facts which were common cause
in the court
a
quo
or with the party's common intentions of the issues before the court
a
quo
.’
[11]
In
Dengetenge
Holdings (Pty) Ltd
v
Southern
Sphere Mining And Development Company Ltd and Others
,
the court remarked:
‘
It
is true that a concession made by counsel on a point of law may be
withdrawn if the withdrawal does not cause any prejudice to
the other
party. However, in my view what counsel for Dengetenge did was not
just to make a concession on a point of law. He effectively
withdrew
Dengetenge‘s opposition to the application….’
[12]
E. Referral to trial
27.
Here, I discuss the basis for my
conclusions to refer the matter to trial and I demonstrate by
selecting only one of the issues
presented by the parties for
resolution.
Whether the applicants
have been excluded from management of the affairs of the first
respondent
28.
The applicants complain that they have been
excluded from managing the affairs of the first respondent. They
further add that, notwithstanding
the first applicant’s
nomination by the second applicant, the respondents refuse to accept
the first applicant as director,
as a form of preemptive strike to
prevent Salt Rock from accessing the requisite financial information
of the first respondent.
The respondents raise several points in
response.
29.
Firstly, the respondents submit that the
applicants are bound by the dispute resolution clause. They say, this
a matter falling
squarely within the parameters of the dispute
resolution clause. All that Lutzkie and the applicants had to do was
issue a notice
of breach, followed by a referral to the five member
committee in the event the complaint was not resolved. To the extent
that
the matter would not be resolved by the five member committee,
it would have been referred to arbitration. Instead of following
the
dispute resolution procedure, the applicants chose to litigate. The
applicants may not ignore the dispute resolution clause.
30.
Secondly,
in terms of the Shareholders Agreement
[13]
,
SA, the day to day management of the affairs of the first respondent
vests in the Chief Executive as delegated by the Executive
Directors.
The first respondent has a Chief Executive Officer and, on that
basis, there can be no complaint about the applicants
being excluded
from managing the affairs of the first respondent.
31.
Thirdly, the respondents submit that they
had long extended an invitation to the applicants to nominate three
suitable individuals,
excluding the first applicant, to serve as
directors, in line with the Shareholders Agreement. The applicants
have not done so.
Instead, they have opted to repeatedly raise the
same complaint. I note in this regard that the respondents’
stance has changed
since the filing of their answering affidavit, in
that they had initially resisted anyone nominated by the first
applicant on the
basis that they cannot trust anyone nominated by
Lutzkie.
32.
Fourthly, on the question of the first
applicant’s fitness to serve as director, the respondents
submit that they are not
prepared to have the first applicant as
director of the first respondent based on the following:
i)
The first applicant, according to the
respondents, was convicted of an offence involving dishonesty in
another country. Although
the respondents assert that this is the
case, they suggest that the issue may require further investigation.
The applicants deny
that Mr Lutzkie was ever convicted of an offence
involving dishonesty in any country.
ii)
The first applicant cannot be trusted with
confidentiality. In this application, he has annexed the first
respondent’s financial
statements, despite the confidentiality
clause in the shareholders agreement.
iii)
The first applicant had informed Moti that
he had obtained the first respondent’s banks statements through
‘his contacts’.
He not only mentioned but demonstrated he
knew what was in the bank statements.
iv)
The respondents further point to Lutzkie’s
failed attempt to liquidate the first respondent following the Sec
345 (1) demand,
the pending proceedings to wind up the first
respondent and the very fact of bringing the present proceedings,
instead of using
the dispute resolution procedure to resolve the
applicants’ complaints. They assert that Lutzkie’s
conduct demonstrated
in all these instances is inconsistent with the
fiduciary duties of a director. For all these reasons, the
respondents argue that
they are not prepared to have the first
applicant serve as a board member.
33.
The first applicant is on record denying,
firstly, that the applicants have no right to manage the affairs of
the first respondent
and secondly, that he is unfit to serve as
director. He refutes the respondents’ claims that he was
convicted of an offence
involving dishonesty in Zimbabwe or anywhere
else. What emerges immediately from this brief exposition of the
parties’ submissions
on the single issue is that there are
irresolvable disputes of fact. The answering and supplementary
affidavits, filed of record,
demonstrate throughout that there are
multiple material disputes of fact which render the matter
irresolvable on paper.
F. Conclusion
34.
During
argument, counsel for the applicants was quick to point out that, on
the undisputed facts, the relief sought in the Notice
of Motion must
be granted. But this cannot be and I will demonstrate why. It will be
recalled that on the eve of the hearing of
16 February 2022, the
applicants moved for an order referring the issues between the
parties in respect of the relief claimed in
the Notice of Motion,
including the question whether a valid settlement agreement had been
concluded in October 2021
[14]
.
35.
The
respondents correctly point out that, in moving the order, the
applicants made a concession that the matter cannot be resolved
on
motion, in light of the myriad of disputes that were confronting
them. On the basis of the same conduct, the applicants exercised
an
election. During argument, when the question of the election was
raised by the respondents’ counsel, counsel for the applicants
submitted that the election was concerned only with the issues
surrounding the Settlement Agreement. The submission was incorrect.
The draft order filed on caselines
[15]
demonstrates that the applicants’ intention was to refer all
the disputes, and not only those pertaining to the Settlement
Agreement. I find that the applicants are bound by their procedural
election to refer the disputes of fact between the parties
to trial.
They are accordingly bound by that election. The concession made by
the applicants too cannot be undone.
G. ORDER
1. The application is
referred to trial in accordance with
Section 163
(2) (l) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
and the following arrangements shall
operate:
1.1 The applicants’
notice of motion dated 23 July 2021 shall stand as simple summons and
the first to fourth respondents’
answering affidavits and
supplementary answering affidavits shall stand as notices of
intention to defend.
1.2 The applicants shall
deliver a declaration within 30 days of this order whereafter the
Uniform Rules of court applicable to
trial actions shall apply in
respect of the further pleadings and the conduct of the proceedings.
2. Pending the outcome of
the trial referred to in paragraph 1 above, it is ordered that:
2.1 The first respondent
is to provide the second to fourth applicants with inspection of the
books and records of the first respondent
in accordance with clause
16.2 of the Shareholders Agreement dated 18 August 2020.
2.2 Any written requests
made in accordance with clause 16.2 of the Shareholders Agreement
shall be complied with within 15 (fifteen)
days of ate of such
request.
2.3 The second to fourth
applicants shall be provided with copies of the Annual Financial
Statements of the first respondent as
soon as they have been
completed and signed off by the first respondents’ auditors
but, in any event, within 180 days of
the first respondent’s
year-end, save that the annual financial statements for the financial
year ended 31 December 2022
shall be provided by 30 November 2023
(unless delayed by causes beyond the control of the first respondent,
such as the delay by
the first respondent’s auditors).
2.4 Within 10 (ten) days
of this order, the first respondent is ordered to provide the second
to fourth applicants with a reconciliation
of the flow of funds to
shareholders since January 2020 to date hereof by way of distribution
as envisaged in
Section 46
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
;
2.5 The first to fourth
respondents are ordered to accept the nomination by the second to
fourth applicants of three directors (the
applicants’ nominees)
to serve on the board of the first respondent, provided that the
applicants’ nominees may not
include the first applicant.
2.6 The second to fourth
respondents and the second to fourth applicants are ordered to seek
agreement on the identity of a person
to serve as an independent
director on the board of the first respondent within 30 days of this
order. Failing agreement, the President
of the Institute of Directors
South Africa shall nominate such person to serve as independent
director on the board of the first
respondent within 14 (fourteen)
days of being requested to do so. The independent director shall be
the chairperson of the board;
2.7 The seventeenth
respondent is authorised and directed to amend its records to reflect
the persons nominated in terms of paragraph
2.5 and 2.6 as directors
of the first respondent.
3. The respondents’
second supplementary answering affidavit filed on 7 September 2023
and the applicants’ reply thereto
are admitted as part of the
record.
4. Costs are reserved for
determination at trial.
BAM
J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing
:
19 - 20 September 2023
Date of
Judgment:
28 May 2024
Appearances:
Applicants’
Counsel
:
Adv
J.J
Brett
SC
with Adv J.G Smit
Instructed
by:
Gothe
Incorporated
Queenswood,
Pretoria
First,
Second, Third, & Fourth
Respondents’
Counsel:
Adv
A.R Bhana SC with Adv
T
Dalrymple
Instructed
by:
Knowles
Husain Lindsay
℅
Friedland
Hart Solomon,
Nicolson
Attorneys
Monument
Park, Pretoria
[1]
Act
71 of 2008
[2]
The
applications heard are: the Sec 163 application; the Rouwkoop
application; the Condonation application; and the application
to
Strike Out.
[3]
Lutzkie
represented the applicants while Moti represented the first to the
fourth respondents.
[4]
Act
61 of 1973.
[5]
Invoice
INA 10010 was for R18 423 000.00 and was issued in December 2020.
The invoice was partially paid and a balance of R4 863
039.45
remained.
[6]
They
are: i) the present Sec 163 application; ii) the Rouwkoop
application - issued during August 2022; iii) application to wind
up
the first respondent - issued during August 2022; and iv) the
Delinquency application - issued in November 2022.
[7]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
(573/08)
[2009] ZASCA 1
(SCA), paragraph 26.
[8]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
(653/04)
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) (31 March 2006), paragraph
55.
[9]
footnote
7
supra
.
[10]
Sandown
Travel (Pty) Ltd v Cricket South Africa
(42317/2011)
[2012] ZAGPJHC 249;
2013 (2) SA 502
(GSJ) (7 December 2012).
[11]
Van
Schalkwyk
v
Nell
;
In re:
M
v M
(57215/2017)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 1107 (21 August 2019), paragraph 39.
[12]
(CCT
39/13)
[2013] ZACC 48
;
2014 (3) BCLR 265
(CC);
2014 (5) SA 138
(CC)
(13 December 2013), paragraph 54.
[13]
Caselines
230, paragraph 12.1, states that this is always subject to the
rights of the shareholders in terms of the SA, or in
terms of common
law, or in terms of the
Companies Act, or
the MOI.
[14]
Paragraph
16 of this judgment, where the wording of the draft order moved for
by the applicants is captured.
[15]
Caselines
F11.
sino noindex
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