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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 833
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## Jones and Others v Hendrik Frederick Delport and Others (2023/082594)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 833;
2025 (2) SA 193 (GP) (28 August 2024)
Jones and Others v Hendrik Frederick Delport and Others (2023/082594)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 833;
2025 (2) SA 193 (GP) (28 August 2024)
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sino date 28 August 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023-082594
1.
REPORTABLE: YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
3.
REVISED: YES
28
August 2024
In the matter between:
LYNETTE
JEAN JONES
First
Applicant
PHILIPPUS
VERMEULEN
Second
Applicant
JEFFREY
ALBERT EARLE
Third
Applicant
and
HENDRIK
FREDERICK DELPORT
First
Respondent
JAN
ANDRIES COETZEE
Second
Respondent
KOLISANG
MOCHESANE LEPHOLISA
Third
Respondent
NIKLAAS
JOHANNES DEGENAAR
Fourth
Respondent
CHRISTOPHER
ARTHUR ILLSTON PICKARD
Fifth
Respondent
NICOLETTE
MULLER
Sixth
Respondent
RAND
AIRPORT HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Seventh
Respondent
RAND
AIRPORT MANAGEMENT COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Eighth
Respondent
THE
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Ninth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
H
F OOSTHUIZEN AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is a review in terms of section 71(5) of the
Companies
Act
,
2008
[1]
(“the act”)
of the determination of the board of directors of the seventh and
eighth respondents (“Holdings”
and “Management”
respectively and collectively “the companies”) to remove
the first to third applicants
(collectively “the applicants”)
in terms of section 71(3)(b) of the act as directors of the
companies. All references
in this judgement to sections are to
sections of the act.
[2]
The first to sixth respondents are the
other directors of the companies who made the determination.
[3]
The ninth respondent is the Companies and
Intellectual Property Commission who did not participate in the
application.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[4]
Holdings is the owner of the immovable
property from which the Rand Airport operates.
[5]
Management, a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Holdings, manages and operates the Rand Airport.
[6]
The shareholders of Holdings are Rand
Operators (Pty) Ltd (“Operators”), holding 50% of the
issued shares, Mayondi Investments
(Pty) Ltd (“Mayondi”),
holding 30% of the issued shares, and Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality (“Ekhurhuleni”),
holding 20% of the issued
shares.
[7]
The approximately 38 shareholders of
Operators are occupants of properties at the Rand Airport and conduct
business from the Rand
Airport.
[8]
The shareholders agreement of Holdings
provides that Operators is entitled to appoint five directors to the
board of Holdings on
condition that the appointees are also directors
of Operators, which directors are appointed by the shareholders of
Operators.
Mayondi and Ekurhuleni are entitled to appoint three and
two directors respectively.
[9]
The applicants and the first and second
respondents were appointed by the shareholders of Operators as
directors and they thus became
directors of Holdings. The applicants
and the first and second respondents are shareholders or
representatives of shareholders
of Operators. The third to sixth
respondents were appointed as directors of Holdings by Mayondi and
Ekurhuleni.
[10]
All the directors of Holdings are also
directors of Management.
[11]
Until February 2023 Stuart Colin Coetzee
(“Coetzee”) was employed by Management as airport
manager. He was also a director
of Operators and the companies.
[12]
At the end of 2022, the companies became
aware of certain irregularities which prompted an investigation into
Coetzee’s conduct,
which culminated in Coetzee’s
resignation as a director of Operators and the companies on 16
February 2023. He was shortly
thereafter replaced as airport manager.
[13]
On 28 April 2023, Coetzee and four other
shareholders of Operators (of which the applicants are either
directors or members) addressed
demands to the board of Operators to
call a shareholders meeting for the purpose of removing the first and
second respondents as
directors of Operators. Various grounds in
support of the removals were stipulated in the demands. The first and
second respondents
were at that stage the only directors of
Operators.
[14]
On 1 June 2023, a shareholders meeting of
Operators was held at which the applicants were appointed as
directors of Operators. Upon
their appointment, the applicants
automatically became directors of the companies. This meeting did not
deal with the removal of
the first and second respondents as
directors of Operators.
[15]
On 9 June 2023, the boards of the companies
adopted unanimous round-robin resolutions to proceed with civil
action against Coetzee
regarding alleged financial mismanagement,
fraud and theft which had occurred at the Rand Airport, which
resolutions have been
implemented. Pursuant to a forensic
investigation, criminal charges were also laid against Coetzee.
[16]
On 18 July 2023, the first applicant
convened a board meeting of Operators for 20 July 2023 to consider
the demands of 28 April
2023 to hold a shareholders meeting of
Operators to consider the removal of the first and second respondents
as directors of Operators.
[17]
On 20 July 2023, the board of Operators
adopted a resolution to hold a shareholders meeting of Operators on 7
August 2023 to consider
the removal of the first and second
respondents as directors of Operators.
[18]
On 25 July 2023, the first respondent
convened a board meeting of the companies for 27 July 2023 to
consider a resolution to remove
the applicants as directors of the
companies in terms of section 71(3)(b). I will deal with the notice
of the meeting and the supporting
documents below.
[19]
The board meetings of 27 July 2023 were
non-quorate and were accordingly automatically rescheduled for 3
August 2023.
[20]
On 3 August 2023, resolutions were adopted
to remove the applicants as directors of the companies, which
resolutions form the subject
matter of the applicants’ review.
[21]
On 7 August 2023, the first and second
respondents were removed as directors of Operators at the
shareholders meeting.
[22]
The first and second respondents contend
that the shareholders meeting was invalid and accordingly applied for
urgent interim relief
pending the finalisation of an application
setting aside the resolutions adopted at the shareholders meeting. A
court order for
interim relief was granted on 1 September 2023. I am
informed that the application to set aside the resolutions adopted at
the
shareholders meeting is pending.
THE REMOVAL OF THE
APPLICANTS AS DIRECTORS
[23]
The notice of the board meeting of 27 July
2023 (which was re-scheduled for 3 August 2023) called upon the
boards of the companies
to consider and resolve, in terms of section
71(3)(b), read with section 71(4), to remove the applicants as
directors of the companies
on the basis that they were negligent and
derelict in their duties as directors.
[24]
The applicants were provided with notices
of the meeting; copies of the proposed resolutions to be adopted, a
statement setting
out the reasons for the proposed resolutions (“the
reasons”) and they were given an opportunity to make
presentations
to the meeting before the resolutions were put to a
vote.
[25]
After setting out the alleged criminal
conduct of Coetzee and the civil and criminal steps which had been
taken against him, the
reasons contained the following allegations:
[25.1]
The applicants embarked upon a campaign
which was designed to remove the first and second respondents as
directors of the companies,
which would benefit Coetzee and be to the
detriment of the companies.
[25.2]
It is the intention of the applicants to
change the composition of the boards of the companies to enable the
new boards to withdraw
the criminal charges against Coetzee and to
terminate the legal action against him.
[25.3]
The applicants used their position as
directors to gain an advantage for Coetzee and knowingly cause harm
to the companies in conflict
with section 76(2)(a).
[25.4]
The applicants did not exercise their
powers and perform their functions as directors of the companies in
the best interest of the
companies and with the degree of care, skill
and diligence that may reasonably be expected of persons carrying out
the same functions
in relation to the companies in conflict with
sections 76(3)(b) and 76(3)(c)(i).
[26]
During the presentation on behalf of the
applicants, the reasons were attacked on the basis that there is no
evidence that the applicants:
[26.1]
have neglected, or been derelict in the
performance of, their functions as directors of the companies; and
[26.2]
acted in conflict with their obligations in
terms of sections 76(2)(a), 76(3)(b) or 76(3)(c)(i).
[27]
The presentation dealt as follows with the
allegations that the applicants support Coetzee:
“
a)
The proximate cause of the reasons for the proposed resolutions was a
perceived belief by [the companies] - nurtured and
fueled by the
first respondent - that the applicants are supportive of …
Coetzee and his alleged unlawful activity against
[the companies].
b) Not only was
this allegation baseless, but the demand for a shareholders meeting
in Operators - being a related, but distinct
juristic entity to that
of [the companies] - could hardly be termed as being ‘supportive’
of … Coetzee. There
is no rational connection between the two
concepts.
c)
No objective facts were placed before [the companies] which could
substantiate a finding of “support” by the
applicants for
… Coetzee, which could be compared to substantial proof that
the applicants were negligent or derelict in
their duties as
directors of [the companies].
”
[28]
The board of the companies, other than the
applicants, subsequently adopted resolutions that the applicants had
neglected, or been
derelict in the performance of their functions as
directors and they were accordingly removed as directors of the
companies with
immediate effect.
THE SCOPE OF A REVIEW
IN TERMS OF SECTION 71(5)
[29]
Section 71 reads in relevant parts as
follows:
“
(3)
If a company has more than two directors, and a shareholder or
director has alleged that a director of the company-…
(b) has
neglected, or been derelict in the performance of, the functions of
director,
the board, other than
the director concerned, must determine the matter by resolution, and
may remove a director whom it has determined
to be … negligent
or derelict…
(4) Before the
board of a company may consider a resolution contemplated in
subsection (3), the director concerned must be
given-
(a)
notice of the meeting, including a
copy of the proposed resolution and a statement setting out the
reasons for the resolution, with
sufficient specificity to reasonably
permit the director to prepare and present a response; and
(b)
a reasonable opportunity to make a
presentation, in person or through a representative, to the meeting
before the resolution is
put to a vote.
(5) If, in terms
of subsection (3), the board of a company has determined that a
director … has been negligent or derelict
… the
director concerned … may apply within 20 business days to a
court to review the determination of the board.
(6) If, in terms
of subsection (3), the board of the company has determined that a
director … has not been negligent
or derelict…-
(a)
any director who voted otherwise on
the resolution, or any holder of voting rights entitled to be
exercised in the election of the
director, may apply to a court to
review the termination of the board; and
(b)
the court, on application in terms
of paragraph (a), may-
(i)
confirm the determination of the
board; or
(ii)
remove the director from office, if
the court is satisfied that the director … has been negligent
or derelict.
”
[30]
Before
1994, our law recognised only three types of review, namely a review
of the decisions of inferior courts; a common law review
of decisions
of administrative authorities; and a wider form of statutory
review.
[2]
[31]
In
Nel
NO v The Master
[3]
Van Heerden AJA dealt as follows with statutory reviews:
“
When
engaged in this third kind of review, the Court has powers of both
appeal and review with the additional power, if required,
of
receiving new evidence and of entering into and deciding the whole
matter afresh. It is not restricted in exercising its powers
to cases
where some irregularity or illegality has occurred. However, while it
is sometimes stated that the Court’s powers
under this kind of
review are ‘unlimited’ or ‘unrestricted’,
this is not entirely correct. The precise
extent of any ‘statutory
review type power’ must always depend on the particular
statutory provision concerned and
the nature and extent of the
functions entrusted to the person or body making the decision under
review. A statutory power of review
may be wider than the ‘ordinary’
judicial review of administrative action (the ‘second type of
review’
identified by Innes CJ in the Johannesburg Consolidated
Investment Co case), so that it combines aspects of both review and
appeal,
but it may also be narrower, ‘with the court being
confined to particular grounds of review or particular remedies’
.”
(footnotes deleted)
[32]
These
three forms of review still exist today but the list has been
expanded as a result of later developments, including the advent
of
the democratic Constitution. Our law currently recognises the
following types of review: review of the proceedings of lower
courts;
automatic review; judicial review in the constitutional sense;
judicial review in the administrative-law sense; and special
statutory review.
[4]
[33]
In
Pityana
v Absa Group Limited,
[5]
the Court was called upon to decide whether rule 53 is available to
an applicant who applies in terms of section 71(5) for the
review of
a determination of the board in terms of section 71(3).
[34]
In
interpreting section 71(5), the learned Judge referred
[6]
to the different meanings which the word “
appeal
”
can have in legislation, as enunciated in
Tikly
v Johannes NO
,
[7]
namely:
[34.1]
an appeal in the wide sense, that is, a
complete hearing of, and fresh determination on the merits of the
matter with or without
additional evidence or information;
[34.2]
an appeal in the ordinary strict sense,
that is, a re-hearing on the merits but limited to the evidence or
information on which
the decision under appeal was given, and in
which the only determination is whether that decision was right or
wrong; and
[34.3]
a review, that is, a limited re-hearing
with or without additional evidence or information to determine, not
whether the decision
under appeal was correct or not, but whether the
decision maker had exercised their powers and discretion honestly and
properly.
[35]
The
learned Judge held
[8]
that “
[i]t
is clear that the review foreseen in section 71(5) falls into the
third category listed in Tikly”
,
which finding was relied upon by Mr Williams on behalf of the first
to sixth respondents and the companies (collectively “the
respondents”).
[36]
I am respectfully of the view that this
finding is, for the following reasons, incorrect:
[36.1]
Section 71(5) uses the term “
review
”
,
which implies that the decision in
Tikly
,
which interpreted the term “
appeal
”
,
is irrelevant.
[36.2]
The
article by Rehana Cassim entitled “
Contesting
the Removal of the Director by the Board of Directors under the
Companies Act
”
[9]
does not contain a statement that a review in terms of section 71(5)
is
sui
generis
and
does not support a finding that “
the
review is of limited nature
”
,
[10]
which findings were also relied upon by Mr Williams.
[36.3]
The learned author argued that
“
it
is not clear whether a court would be empowered to review the
substance and merits of the board’s decision or whether it
would be empowered to review only the procedural aspects of the
decision
“
but also that
“
an
argument may be made that a court reviewing the decision of the board
of directors under s 71(5) of the [act] would …
be empowered
to consider both the merits and the procedural aspects of the
decision
.”
[36.4]
Contrary
to what is stated by the learned Judge,
[11]
at the time of the judgement in
Pityana
,
there was a reported judgement on the interpretation of section
71(5), namely
Wait
v
Marais,
[12]
which came to the opposite conclusion on the scope of a review in
terms of section 71(5). (I will deal with this decision below.)
[36.5]
As
is demonstrated in
Nel
supra
,
the question in a statutory review is not necessarily “
whether
there were irregularities in the proceedings which may show that
there has been a failure of justice
”,
as found by the learned Judge.
[13]
[36.6]
The
finding that a court reviewing the determination of the board “
would
be empowered to enquire not only into the procedural correctness of
the decision but also at least whether the factual finding
is correct
that there was indeed negligence or dereliction
”
[14]
contradicts the finding that the purpose of a review in terms of
section 71(5) is “
to
determine, not whether the decision … was correct or not, but
whether the arbiters had exercised their powers and discretion
honestly and properly
”.
[15]
[37]
The word “
review
”
,
used in section 71(5), was interpreted as follows in
Wait
:
“
[46]
In my view, the sense in which the term ‘review’ is used
in section 71 must be determined by means
of applying a purposive
interpretation having due regard to its context in the Act. Regard
must also be had to the dictum in Nel
[supra] that ‘… it
is important to have regard to the nature of the functions entrusted
to the person whose decision
is under review’.
[46] Applying
the above approach, it is of note that section 71(3) and (4) entrust
a novel power to the board of directors
of companies to remove a
director after having followed a peremptory formal process. The
removal patently has potentially far-reaching
consequences for the
affected director such as an affront to integrity and dignity;
reputational harm; impairment of standing and
future prospects of
acquiring directorships; adverse financial consequences and the like.
The potential for abuse of the power
must also be factored in. The
decision-maker is often not endorsed with the requisite adjudicatory
skills to properly make a determination
which requires that complex
factual and legal conclusions must be drawn in respect of complicated
questions, for example, whether
or not negligence, neglect or
dereliction of duties has been established on the part of the
affected director.
[47] The need,
identified in section 5(1), to give effect to the purposes of the Act
set out in section 7 when interpreting
the provisions of the Act must
be borne in mind. In this regard the purposes of encouraging
transparency and high standards of
corporate governance (section
7(b)(iii)) as well as encouraging the efficient and responsible
management of companies (section
7(j)), are particularly pertinent.
Also of importance is the underlying purpose of providing adequate
safeguards for the rights
of the affected director. This is
illustrated by the rights to adequate notice, sufficiently specified
reasons for the proposed
resolution to reasonably permit the director
to prepare and present a response, and a reasonable opportunity to
make a presentation
to the meeting before the resolution is put to a
vote.
[48] Taking all
the above considerations into account, a proper interpretation of the
term ‘review’ in section
71(5) requires the court in my
view to undertake a complete reconsideration, in the wide sense, of
the board’s determination
as envisaged in the above
authorities. This conclusion also gives due weight to the need to
provide adequate protection to the
rights of the affected director.”
[38]
The
finding of the learned Judge
[16]
that “
the
court will … not lightly interfere with the determination to
remove the director as a director of a company is deployed
to that
position at the behest of the shareholders or other directors
”
(which is also relied upon by Mr Williams) cannot be supported. This
finding ignores the fact that directors serve at the
behest of
shareholders who elected them and that the shareholders can remove
the directors at will in terms of section 71(1) of
the act without
having to provide reasons.
[17]
Directors are not “
deployed
… at the behest of … other directors
”.
[39]
I
similarly disagree with the finding of the learned Judge
[18]
(which are also relied upon by Mr Williams) that “
[i]t
seems doubtful that the court will interfere with the decision of the
board to remove a director if the procedures have been
complied with,
his removal is rationally supported by the reasons and there has been
compliance with s 71(4) in respect of the
reason and the required
specificity
”.
[40]
It accordingly follows that I do not agree
with Mr Williams that the court is only obliged to consider whether
the peremptory requirements
in section 71(4) have been complied with
and not whether the determination in terms of section 71(3) was
correct. I concur with
the finding in
Wait
that the court is entitled, depending on the facts, to “
undertake
a complete reconsideration, in the wide sense, of the board’s
determination
”.
THE GROUNDS OF REVIEW
[41]
The applicants contend in the founding
affidavit that
“
[t]he
application is instituted in terms of section 71(5) … on the
ground of legality and/or section 6(2) of the Promotion
of
Administrative Justice Act no 3. of 2000 (“PAJA”)
.”
[42]
Mr
Labuschagne, who appeared on behalf of the applicants, conceded that
the determination in terms of section 71(3) does not amount
to
administrative action and that the determination can accordingly not
be reviewed in terms of PAJA, which concession was correctly
made.
[19]
[43]
The
principle of legality operates as a residual source of review
jurisdiction but legality also has a wider meaning, namely the
broad
constitutional principle that governs the use of all public power
rather than the narrower realm of administrative action.
This
principle of legality is an aspect of the rule of law, a founding
value that features in section 1(c) of the Constitution.
It
expresses the fundamental idea that “
the
exercise of public power is only legitimate where lawful
”.
[20]
[44]
In support of their review “
on
the ground of legality
”, the
applicants contend as follows in the founding affidavit:
“
103.
The entrenchment of the principle of legality via the foundational
rule of law is vital for the realisation of the constitutional
right
to administrative justice.
104.
The achievement of administrative Justice is dependent upon
administrative action being invalid and therefore
in compliance with
the principle of legality.
105.
Legality, being an incident of the rule of law, is one of the
constitutional controls in the exercise of
public power. The exercise
of any power must accordingly comply with the Constitution and the
doctrine of legality.
106.
At its core, the doctrine of legality requires that the exercise of
administrative discretional power by
the board of directors of [the
companies] must be lawful.
”
[45]
In view of the fact that the boards of the
companies did not exercise a public power in terms of section 71(3),
the reliance on
the principle of legality (in the sense used by the
applicants) as a ground of review is inappropriate.
[46]
The fact that the determination by the
boards of the companies does not amount to administrative action and
that the boards of the
companies did not exercise public power, do
not however mean that the application ought to be dismissed, as
submitted by the respondents.
[47]
Mr Labuschagne submitted that the
determination by the boards of the companies should be reviewed on
the basis that the alleged
conduct, as set out in paragraph [25]
above, does not amount to neglect or dereliction in the performance
of the applicants’
functions as directors of the companies.
DISCUSSION
[48]
The provisions of section 76, upon which
the respondents rely, read in the relevant parts as follows:
“
(2)
A director of a company must-
(a)
not use the position of director…
(i)
to gain an advantage … for
another person other than the company…; or
(ii)
to knowingly cause harm to the
company…
(3)
…
a director of a company,
when acting in that capacity must exercise the powers and perform the
functions of director-…
(b)
in the best interests of the
company; and
(c)
with the degree of care, skill and
diligence that may reasonably be expected of a person-
(i)
carrying out the same functions in
relation to the company as those carried out by that director; and
(ii)
having the general knowledge, skill
and experience of that director
.”
[49]
The applicants were appointed as directors
of Operators and thus became directors of the companies on 1 June
2023.
[50]
The conduct of the applicants in supporting
Coetzee on 28 April 2023 to demand that a shareholders meeting of
Operators be held
for the purpose of removing the first and second
respondents as directors of Operators was done in their capacities as
representatives
of shareholders of Operators. In view of the fact
that the applicants had not been appointed as directors of the
companies at that
stage, this conduct is irrelevant and cannot
support allegations of neglect or dereliction in terms of section
71(3)(b).
[51]
The removal of the first and second
respondents as directors of Operators occurred after the adoption of
the resolution in terms
of section 71(3) and could accordingly not
have been relied upon on 3 August 2023 when the resolutions to remove
the applicants
as directors were adopted.
[52]
The fact that the applicants (in their
capacities as representatives of shareholders of Operators) supported
the removal of the
first and second respondents as directors of
Operators had nothing to do with their positions of directors of the
companies. The
applicants did not “
use
their positions of directors
” of
the companies when they acted as representatives of shareholders of
Operators and they accordingly did not breach their
duties in terms
of section 76(2)(a).
[53]
In view of the fact that the conduct of the
applicants on which reliance is placed by the respondents did not
amount to the exercise
of powers and the performance of functions of
directors of the companies, the applicants similarly did not breach
their duties
in terms of section 76(3)(b) and 76(3)(c)(i).
[54]
There is in any event not a shred of
evidence to support the respondents’ contention that the
applicants sought to remove
the first and second respondents as
directors of the companies with the intention of changing the
composition of the boards of
the companies to enable the new boards
to withdraw the criminal charges against Coetzee and to terminate the
legal action against
him. The respondents’ allegations in this
regard amount to unsupported speculation.
[55]
The fact that the applicants supported
legal action against Coetzee approximately six weeks after they had
indicated that the first
and second respondents should be removed as
directors of Operators and the fact that the legal action against
Coetzee is ongoing
without any evidence of interference by the
applicants therein, support the applicants’ allegation that
they do not have
the intention to terminate the legal action against
Coetzee.
56]
There is no reason why the applicants
cannot simultaneously support legal action against Coetzee and the
removal of the first and
second respondents as directors of Operators
and the companies.
[57]
I accordingly hold that the applicants were
not negligent or derelict in the performance of their functions of
directors of the
companies, within the meaning of section 71(3)(b),
and that the first to sixth respondents could not validly determine
to remove
the applicants as directors of the companies.
[58]
In the premises the determinations of the
board of the companies to remove the applicants as directors of the
companies fall to
be reviewed in terms of section 71(5).
[59]
The parties agreed that costs should follow
the result and that costs on scale B are appropriate.
ORDER
[60]
I accordingly grant an order in the
following terms:
[60.1]
The determinations of the boards of
directors of the seventh and eighth respondents, made at the meeting
of the boards held on 3
August 2023, to remove the first to third
applicants as directors of the seventh and eighth respondents, are
reviewed and set aside.
[60.2]
The first to third applicants are forthwith
reinstated as directors of the seventh and eighth respondents.
[60.3]
The ninth respondent is directed to amend
its records, if necessary, to reflect that the first to third
applicants are directors
of the seventh and eighth respondents.
[60.4]
The first to eighth respondents are
directed to pay the costs of the application on scale B.
H
F OOSTHUIZEN AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is
deemed to be 28 August
2024
.
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicants: Adv F J Labuschagne
Instructed
by Cilliers Attorneys
Counsel
for the first to eighth respondents: Adv D L Williams
Instructed
by Wrigth Rose-Innes Inc
Date of Hearing: 24 July
2024
Date of Judgment: 28
August 2024
[1]
Act
71 of 2008
[2]
Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Company v Johannesburg Town Council
1903 TS 111
at 116
[3]
2005
(1) SA 276
(SCA) para [23]
[4]
Hoexter
and Penfold
Administrator
of Law in South Africa
,
Third Edition, pp 142 to 144
[5]
2024
(1) SA 491 (GP)
[6]
Pityana
supra
para
[74]
[7]
1963
(2) SA 588
(T) at 590F-591A
[8]
Pityana
supra
para
[81]
[9]
SALJ
2016, p 133
[10]
Pityana
supra
para
[75]
[11]
Pityana
supra
para
[74]
[12]
2022
JDR 3202 (ECP)
[13]
Para
[76]
[14]
Para
[77]
[15]
Tikly
supra
at 591A
[16]
Pityana
supra
para
[80]
[17]
Miller
v Natmed Defence (Pty) Ltd
2022 (2) SA 554
(GJ) para [36]
[18]
Pityana
supra
para
[90]
[19]
Pityana
supra
paras [12] to [31]
[20]
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan
Council
[1998] ZACC 17
;
1999 (1) SA 374
(CC) paras [56] to [59]
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