Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 702South Africa
Match Padel Cedar Square (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Liquor Board (058697/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 702 (16 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 July 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Match Padel Cedar Square (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Liquor Board (058697/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 702 (16 July 2024)
Match Padel Cedar Square (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Liquor Board (058697/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 702 (16 July 2024)
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sino date 16 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No.
058697/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
16 JULY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MATCH
PADEL CEDAR SQUARE (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
THE
GAUTENG LIQUOR BOARD
Respondent
This
matter was heard virtually (MS Teams) and disposed of in terms of the
directives issued by the Judge President of this Division.
The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant, a company duly registered in terms of the company laws
of the Republic of South
Africa, approached court on urgency seeking
a
rule nisi
calling upon the respondent to give reasons why an
order authorising the applicant to trade in liquor as if the
restaurant liquor
licence applied for by the applicant with the
respondent for its business, has been granted and issued, pending the
review in terms
of rule 53 of the Rules of Court of a decision of the
respondent to decline the application of the applicant for such a
licence.
[2]
The respondent is opposing the application on urgency and on the
merits. The issue of urgency
shall be dealt with first as it might be
dispositive of the application.
FACTUAL
MATRIX
[3]
The facts of the application are simple and mostly common cause
between the parties. The nature
of the business of the applicant is
said to be that of a Match Pedal franchise, where people play a game
akin to tennis, according
to rules which makes the game a
cardiovascular intensive sport, resulting in combatants usually
wanting to enjoy a beer or like
beverage after completing a
competitive but social game of sport. In order to have such beverages
available to players, and their
spectator friends, the applicant
requires a liquor licence. The business is dependent upon offering a
full service in order to
be sustainable and profitable.
[4]
The applicant says that it planned its business with proper allowance
for the process of applying
for a liquor licence and entered into the
necessary lease agreement for the premises, employed staff, and
established a coffee
shop type of complimentary facility, where
liquor is to be served with drinks, snacks and meals to patrons who
have completed a
Match Pedal game. An amount of R9 000 000
is said to be invested in the establishment of the business with a
projected
break-even turnover of R600 000. When the sale of
liquor is included, the expected turnover is calculated as R900 000.
At the moment because there is no liquor sold, the turnover is
R600 000.
[5]
The applicant employed fifteen employees for the business on the
presumption that a liquor licence
will be on hand when the business
opens. Without liquor being available to be served, the applicant
will have to retrench four
of the employees.
[6]
The applicant applied for a liquor licence which was declined o
n
16 January 2024. The reason for declining the liquor licence
application is on the basis that, “
the
applicant does not have a proper business permit that allows him
[Sic!] to trade in South Africa”.
The
decision rejecting the liquor licence application was communicated by
email to the applicant on 15 April 2024.
[7]
It is alleged that after learning about the denial of the liquor
licence application by the respondent,
the applicant was referred to
a liquor consultant, who unsuccessfully, tried to resolve the matter
with the respondent. The urgent
application was, subsequently,
launched on 28 May 2024, on an urgent basis.
LAW
APPLICABLE TO THE ISSUE OF URGENCY
[8]
Before a court makes a finding on the merits of an urgent
application, it must first consider
whether the application is indeed
so urgent that it must be dealt with on the urgent court roll.
[9]
The procedure for urgent applications is governed by rule 6(12)(b) of
the Uniform Rules of Court
(“the Rules”), which provides
that
“
In
every affidavit filed in support of any application under paragraph
(a) of this subrule,
[1]
the
applicant must set forth explicitly the circumstances which is
[sic!]
averred render
[sic!]
the matter urgent and the reasons why the applicant claims that
applicant cannot be afforded substantial redress in due course.”
[10]
The rule is trite and has been applied and given emphasis in numerous
cases. I
n
Heathrow
Property Holdings
,
[2]
the court stated that –
“
. . . In terms of
the rules of court an applicant is required in an application which
is brought as a matter of urgency to pertinently
and expressly set
out the grounds which justify it not following the ordinary rules and
process, and to provide adequate and cogent
reasons that it cannot be
expected to await a hearing in due course.”
[11]
The court in
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd & Another
,
[3]
when dealing with the test to be applied in urgent applications,
stated that:
“
It
means that if there is some delay in instituting the proceedings an
applicant has to explain the reasons for the delay and why
despite
the delay he claims that he cannot be afforded substantial redress at
the hearing in due course. I must also mention that
the fact that the
applicant wants to have the matter resolved urgently does not render
the matter urgent. The correct and crucial
test is whether if the
matter were to follow its normal course as laid down by the rules an
applicant will be afforded substantial
redress. If he cannot be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course, then the
matter qualifies to be enrolled and
heard as an urgent application.
If, however, despite the anxiety of an application he can be afforded
a substantial redress in
an application in due course, the applicant
does not qualify to be enrolled and heard as an urgent application."
[12]
The requirement as stated is that the applicant must ‘
pertinently
and expressly’ set out the reason why the matter is urgent and
provide adequate and cogent reasons why the applicant
cannot be
afforded substantial redress in due course. These reasons must appear
in the founding affidavit.
[13]
It is the respondent’s proposition that the matter is not
urgent and that no reasons are set out in
the founding affidavit why
the matter is urgent and why the applicant will not be afforded
substantial redress in due course.
ARGUMENTS
[14]
The applicant’s allegations of urgency are set out in the heads
of argument and are contextualised
against the facts that the
applicant submitted in the founding affidavit. The allegations are
that –
14.1
the refusal of the applicant's application occurred on 15 April 2024;
14.2
the applicant, thereafter, appointed a liquor consultant to make
further submissions to the respondent regarding
the applicant's
application;
14.3
the liquor consultant made certain representations to the respondent,
which representations were met with
a response that the respondent is
functus officio
;
14.4
the applicant, thereafter, approached its current legal
representatives, who advised the applicant that this
application had
to be launched on an urgent basis;
14.5
the application was, thereafter, finalised, commissioned and served
on the respondent on 28 May 2024;
14.6
despite being granted nine days to serve its answering affidavit, the
respondent elected to only serve its
answering affidavit two days
thereafter on 12 June 2024 at 18:00 (without any request for
condonation);
14.7
despite the late filing, the applicant attended to prepare and serve
its replying affidavit before 12:00
on 13 June 2024.
[15]
The applicant contends that the urgency and the lack of substantial
redress, in this application is manifest,
and that the application
ought to be heard on an urgent basis.
[16]
The respondent is opposing the application on urgency contending that
there are no facts set forth in the
founding affidavit that renders
this matter urgent. According to the respondent, rule 16(2)(b)
mandates the applicant to
set out in the founding affidavit facts
that establishes the circumstances that the applicant avers render
the matter urgent, and
the reasons why the applicant cannot be
afforded substantial redress in due course. This, the respondent
argues, the applicant
failed to do, as such the matter should be
struck from the roll with costs.
Whether
the urgency is self-created
[17]
The applicant’s reason for the delay in launching the urgent
application is alleged to be the utilisation
of a liquor consultant
who advised the applicant to take
the route of
'further representations' to the respondent.
It
is the applicant’s submission that it discovered in hindsight
that the liquor consultant who was recommended to it for
assistance
after the liquor licence application was declined, was not a person
with the necessary legal qualification. The liquor
consultant advised
the applicant to make further submissions to the respondent
notwithstanding that the respondent was
functus officio
.
The
applicant followed this advice and allowed the liquor consultant to
make further submissions which obviously did not have any
resultant
change to the decision as the respondent was
functus
officio
by then. The result was that
the applicant being
bona fide,
wasted time in an endeavour to challenge the decision of the
respondent, only to find that it is only the court that can be of
assistance, under the circumstances.
[18]
The respondent on the other hand, contends that the applicant brought
this application as an urgent application,
whilst there was nothing
urgent about it, and if any urgency is claimed, it is clearly
self-created. In fortification of the submission,
the respondent
relied on the judgment in
E
M W vs S W
,
[4]
wherein it was held that
"Likewise,
where the facts indicate that the urgency is self-created, an
applicant will not be entertained and the application
will be struck
from the roll."
[19]
It is the respondent’s submission that the administrative
decision taken to decline the applicant's
application for a liquor
license was taken on 16 January 2024 and communicated to the
applicant on 15 April 2024. The urgent application
was only brought
on 28 May 2024 which is months later since the applicant became aware
of the decision. The period from 16 January
2024 to 28 May 2024 is
not substantively accounted for, in the founding affidavit. Rule
6(12) mandates an applicant in an urgent
application to set out such
facts in the founding affidavit. This has not been done, so it was
argued.
The respondent, argued, consequently, that t
his
is a classic case of self- created urgency and an abuse of court
process.
[20]
The applicant is objecting to this proposition by the respondent, and
argues that it only became aware of
the decision of the respondent on
15 April 2024 when the respondent transmitted an email to the
applicant informing it about the
decision that was taken on 16
January 2024. It was contended on behalf of the applicant that the
date was erroneously stated as
16 January 2024, and that the error
was not taken up or rectified in the replying affidavit because the
respondent admitted in
the answering affidavit that the deponent
became aware of the decision on 15 April 2015.
[21]
The evidence upon which the respondent relies for the proposition
that the applicant had knowledge of the
respondent’s decision
on 16 January 2024, stems from a paragraph in the Founding
Affidavit,
[5]
whereat it is
stated that
the
applicant wasted three months in an endeavour to challenge the
decision of the respondent. The time wasted could only be three
months if calculated from 16 January 2024 and not April 2024.
[22]
The parties do not agree on the date on which the applicant had
knowledge of the decision rejecting the liquor
licence application.
This is the date that will assist in determining whether the
application warrants a hearing in the urgent
court. The initial
inquiry will be to ascertain the precise moment/date at which the
applicants acquired knowledge regarding the
aggrieved administrative
decision that necessitated this application. This, as the respondent
argues, is a trigger event.
[23]
In the heads of argument, it is submitted on behalf of the applicant
that the refusal of the applicant’s
application occurred on 15
April 2024. Whereas in oral argument it was alluded that the
decision was taken and communicated
to the applicant on 15 April 2024
and that is when the applicant became aware of the decision, and
thereafter employed the services
of a liquor consultant.
[24]
The respondent’s counsel interjected the applicant’s
counsel during argument, contending that
the applicant’s
counsel was making submissions from the bar in regard to his argument
that the applicant became aware of
the decision on 15 April 2024.
It was, then, submitted on behalf of the applicant that the deponent
to the founding affidavit made a mistake in alleging
that the
applicant became aware of the disqualification of the licence already
on 16 January 2024. The contention is that if consideration
is given
to what is stated in annexure “D” to the founding
affidavit, that is, the decision of the licence application,
it is
clear that the applicant only became aware of the fact that the
respondent elected not to allow the applicant to obtain a
liquor
licence on 15 April 2024.
[25]
A further contention by the applicant was that the error was not
corrected in the replying affidavit because
the respondent had, in
the answering affidavit, made common cause with the fact that the
applicant became aware of the respondent’s
decision on 15 April
2024. In this regard the court was referred to a paragraph in the
respondent’s answering affidavit stating
that –
“
The
Applicant has been aware of this decision since 15 April 2024 but
only approached this court on urgent basis on 28 May 2024
and set the
matter down for hearing on the 18
th
of June 2024. This is almost 2 months since the awareness of the
decision, and consequently, the urgency has since fallen away
in the
hands of the applicant.”
[6]
[26]
From this paragraph, it is clear that the respondent had conceded
that the applicant became aware of the
respondent’s decision on
15 April 2024. It was disingenuous of the respondent’s counsel
to want to argue that the applicant
became aware of the decision on
16 January 2024 when a concession had already been made. It is, also,
patently clear that the period
at issue here is two months and not
three months as the respondent’s counsel sought to argue.
The
eventual decision of the respondent’s counsel not to pursue
this point, was, under the circumstances, fairly made.
[27]
Counsel argued that even if the argument pertaining to 16
January 2024 is abandoned,
the applicant has
not been able to account for the period between 15 April 2024 to 28
May 2024. The applicant has in the founding
affidavit stated
the reason for the delay in approaching the court earlier. The
applicant’s evidence is that
from 15
April 2024, after learning about the decision, the applicant employed
the services of a liquor consultant
to have discussion with the
respondent in order to resolve the issues. And that when the
negotiations fell flat, the applicant,
on 28 May 2024, launched the
urgent application. A mere month and half after the applicant became
aware of the decision.
[28]
Rule 6(12)(b) requires
the applicant to
explicitly set forth the circumstances which are averred render the
matter urgent.
The requirement is that the circumstances must
be set out in a clear and detailed manner, leaving no room for
confusion or doubt.
The applicant, however, has set out facts without
dates indicating when it first approached the respondent or made the
alleged
representations; how long it took the respondent to respond
to the representations; and when the applicant or the liquor
consultant
first became aware that the applicant cannot be assisted
by the respondent. These facts, in the manner that they have
been
set out, leave much to be desired.
[29]
A question may, also, be asked why the applicant chose to challenge
the decision of the respondent by making
presentations to the
respondent when the decision had already been taken, and there are no
internal processes available.
The answer that the applicant
acted on the advice of the liquor consultant begs a further question
of why an incompetent liquor
consultant was employed, and why the
negligence and/or lack of knowledge of the procedures of the
respondent by a person who professed
to be a liquor consultant,
should be placed at the door of the respondent.
[30]
It was argued on behalf of the applicant that the delay occasioned by
the employment of the liquor consultant
should be acceptable since
these were efforts by the applicant in trying to resolve the matter
before approaching the court. In
this regard, the applicant relied on
the judgment in
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd & Another
,
[7]
wherein it was held that the applicant should not be said to be
dilatory in bringing the application, where efforts were taken
to try
and settle the matter first before rushing to court.
[31]
The challenge for the applicant, however, is that in this instance,
there was no issues to resolve and/or
settle. The respondent had
become
functus officio
immediately after issuing the decision
refusing to grant the liquor licence, and could do nothing to assist
the applicant in resolving
the matter. It is not in dispute that the
respondent’s processes do not allow for internal remedies. Once
a decision has
been taken, the proper procedure is to approach the
court if not satisfied with the decision of the respondent. The
applicant,
instead, whether out of ignorance or for having been
ill-advised opted to engage the respondent, and correctly so, found
no relief.
[32]
The respondent’s argument that “
the
urgency has since fallen away in the hands of the applicant
”,
though for different reasons, has merit.
The
applicant should have launched this application as soon as it gained
knowledge that its application for the liquor licence has
been
rejected. If they did so, urgency would not have been an issue now.
Thus, the applicant failed to pass the first
hurdle for the requirement of urgency as set out in rule 6(12)(b).
Whether
the applicant cannot be afforded substantial redress in due course
[33]
It was held in
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd & Another
,
[8]
correctly so, that
the
delay in instituting proceedings is not, on its own, ground for
refusing to regard the matter as urgent. A court is obliged
to
consider the circumstances of the case and the explanation given. The
important issue is whether, despite the delay, the applicant
can or
cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
[34]
It is trite that the question of whether a matter is sufficiently
urgent to be enrolled and heard as an urgent
application is
underpinned by the issue of absence of substantial redress in due
course. The threshold to establish this
juristic fact of
"
absence
of substantive redress
"
is said to be lower than that of
"irreparable
harm"
for the purposes of establishing an interim interdict.
[9]
[35]
It was, also, held in
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd & Another
,
[10]
that
“
.
. . the procedure set out in rule 6(12) is not there for the taking.
An applicant has to set forth explicitly the circumstances
which he
avers render the matter urgent. More importantly, the applicant must
state the reasons why he claims that he cannot be
afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in due course. The question of
whether a matter is sufficiently urgent to be enrolled
and heard as
an urgent application is underpinned by the issue of absence of
substantial redress in an application in due course.
The rules allow
the court to come to the assistance of a litigant because if the
latter were to wait for the normal course laid
down by the rules it
will not obtain substantial redress.”
[36]
Whether an applicant will not be able obtain substantial redress in a
hearing in due course will be determined
by the facts of each case.
An applicant must make out his case in that regard.
[37]
The facts in this instance as
alleged
in the founding papers, are that the customers of the applicant’s
business, who play the match padel game,
usually
want to enjoy a beer or like beverage after completing the game. In
order to have such beverages available to the players,
and their
spectator friends, the applicant requires a liquor licence. It
is said that the business is dependent upon offering
a full service,
which is liquor, drinks, snacks and meals, in order to be sustainable
and profitable. The contention is that
if the business remains
unprofitable, four staff members have to be retrenched. The liquor
licence will be able to make the business
profitable in order to
carry these four employees, so it is argued.
In
order to show that the business is not profitable, the applicant
alleges in the founding affidavit that the expected turnover,
including the sale of liquor, was calculated to be R900 000 but
currently the business is running at a break-even turnover
of
R600 000.
[38]
The reasons why the applicant claims that it cannot be afforded
substantial redress in due course, are that
firstly,
the current operation of the business is not sustainable and
profitable due to the fact that it does not serve liquor;
secondly,
if the business continues not making a profit four staff members will
have to be retrenched; and, lastly, if the applicant
follows the
normal review through the normal course it will take too long.
[39]
The question is whether the applicant has made out a case that it
will not obtain substantial redress in
due course if it is not
granted the liquor licence now.
[40]
The facts upon which the applicant relies for its contention that it
will not be afforded substantial redress
in due course are couched in
such a way that the harm that the applicant stands to suffer if it
continues to operate without the
liquor licence, is the loss of the
four employees. The applicant argues that it has to retrench the four
employees because the
business is not making profit and/or the
turnover of the business is R600 000 instead of R900 000.
The four employees,
it appears, were hired for the service pertaining
to the liquor side of the business, and that without that service,
they have
become redundant (overburdening the business), and should
be retrenched. Thus, in order that they should not be retrenched,
this
court must grant an order allowing the applicant to trade as if
it has been issued a restaurant liquor licence.
[41]
In fortification of this reasoning, it was emphatically argued on
behalf of the applicant that the applicant
needs the business to
survive and make profit so that the four employees should not be
retrenched. It was also argued that the
applicant needs to be able to
trade and allow the restaurant to run in order for the business to
survive, because if the applicant
waits, it will have to retrench the
employees. And, the applicant had no alternative remedy but to
approach court on urgency, as
it did.
[42]
It appears that the applicant’s concern is more that the four
employees will have to be retrenched.
The
applicant’s evidence is not that without a liquor licence the
business will not carry on or that it will not be profitable.
It is
that the business cannot make enough turnover and/or profit to be
able to continue employing the four employees facing retrenchment.
[43]
Save to say that the expected turnover, including the sale of liquor,
was calculated to be R900 000
but currently the business is
running at a break-even turnover of R600 000, the harm the
applicant stands to suffer does not
appear in the papers.
Indications
are that the applicant’s business will be able to trade without
a liquor licence, as it is now trading.
The
evidence on record is that the business does not only depend on the
sale of liquor. There are other services that are currently
sustaining the business.
[44]
The applicant does not set out in the affidavit how it would not
obtain substantial redress in due course
if the four employees are
retrenched.
There is no evidence on record
to indicate that if the four employees are retrenched the business
will not be able to operate sustainably
and profitably.
[45]
These facts do not support the applicant’s contention of lack
of substantial redress in due course.
At most it might, perhaps, be
the four employees facing retrenchment, who it can be said might not
obtain redress in due course.
There are no facts that establishes the
harm that the applicant will suffer which will eventuate in the lack
of redress if it is
not issued a licence now, and that the applicant
cannot await its turn in the queue to be heard at a later date.
[46]
The proposition by the applicant that the review process can drag on
for at least a year or more because
the respondent, through its legal
advisors, is not inclined to be compliant with time frames and
especially with the filing of
the record of proceedings in
accordance with Rule 53, all giving rise to delaying the review
matter to be ready for final
adjudication, is made without any
factual substantiation. Without any factual basis, the contention is
speculative and unacceptable.
[47]
Every issue that potentially threatens an applicant’s business
is urgent to such applicant, and understandably
so. However, it is
important to distinguish between what the applicant considers to be
urgent from what is actually urgent. The
applicant, in this instance,
premises its urgency on the fact that without a liquor licence its
business is not making a profit
which will ultimately result in the
retrenchment of four of its employees. As stated above, this does not
establish the fact that
the applicant will not be afforded redress in
due course.
[48]
The applicant argues further that the right to fair administrative
decision-making as well as the right to
make a living, are both
entrenched in the Bill of Rights forming part of the Constitution,
and that these rights are binding.
[49]
The applicant’s rights that are argued to be entrenched in the
Bill of Rights and the Constitution,
like the rights in terms of
section 34 of the Constitution and this court’s resultant
obligation;
the adverse effect upon the
equitable remedy in terms of section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution as
read with section 8 of PAJA;
the inherent urgency in applications to
vindicate the rule of law and to ensure that power is exercised by
the correct repository
of power; and the blatant and continued breach
of the Constitutional imperatives ensconced in Section 217 of the
Constitution,
can only be considered against the backdrop of the
applicant being able to obtain substantial redress in due course.
[50]
The applicant has not made out a case in the founding papers why it
cannot get substantial redress at a hearing
in due course,
and
reasons provided in the founding affidavit do not found urgency.
CONCLUSION
[51]
It is trite that the applicant in an urgent application must in the
founding affidavit set out explicitly
the circumstances on which he
relies to render the matter urgent and the reason why the claim is
made that substantial redress
will not be afforded in due course. The
applicant failed to do so in this application.
The
application falls to be struck from the roll.
COSTS
[52]
The applicant seeks to be granted a cost order against the respondent
on a punitive scale. It, in the alternative,
argued that if the court
is not inclined to grant a punitive cost order, the nature of the
application, the legal principles applicable,
and the importance of
the matter justify an order in terms of Scale C of Rule 69.
[53]
This application does not warrant the imposition of a punitive scale
of costs, nor is the nature of the application,
the legal principles
applicable, and the importance of the matter justify an order in
terms of Scale C of Rule 69.
[54]
The applicant is entitled to its costs as the successful party. Such
costs to be in terms of scale B level
of costs as envisaged in Rule
69.
ORDER
[55]
In the premises the following order is made
1.
The application is struck from the roll
for lack of urgency.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the respondent’s costs in terms
of scale B of rule
69 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
KUBUSHI
J
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances
:
For the applicant:
Adv V Mukwevho
Cell: 083 313 3591
Email:
mukwevho@rsabar.com
Instructed by:
Marius Blom INC
Tel: (012) 004 0244
Email:
marius@mariusblom.co.za
For the respondent:
State attorney
Email:
lnkuna@justice.gov.za
Tel: 012 309 1554
Date of argument:
19 June 2024
Date of judgment:
16 July 2024
[1]
Rule 12(a): In urgent applications the court or a judge may dispense
with the forms and service provided for in these rules and
may
dispose of such matter at such time and place and in such manner and
in accordance with such procedure (which shall as far
as practicable
be in terms of these rules) as it deems fit.
[2]
Heathrow Property Holdings No 3 CC v Manhattan Place Body Corporate
2022 (1) SA 211
(WCC) at para [20].
[3]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd & Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd & Others (11/33767) [2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September
2011)
at para [9].
[4]
E.M.W
v S.W (26912/2017) (2023] ZAGPJHC 710 (15 June 2023).
[5]
Paragraph 8.9 of the Founding Affidavit.
[6]
Paragraph 2.3.2 of the Answering Affidavit.
[7]
At Para [8] thereof; see also
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004 (2) SA 181
para 34.
[8]
At Para 8 thereof.
[9]
Luna
Meubels Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin & Another (t/a Mankin's
Furniture Manufacturers)
1977 (4) SA 135
(W) at 137F.
[10]
At para [6].
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