Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1088South Africa
Joubert v Black Rhino Game Lodge (Pty) Ltd and Others (083030/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1088 (24 October 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Joubert v Black Rhino Game Lodge (Pty) Ltd and Others (083030/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1088 (24 October 2024)
Joubert v Black Rhino Game Lodge (Pty) Ltd and Others (083030/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1088 (24 October 2024)
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sino date 24 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case No:
083030/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHERS JUDGES: YES
(3) REVISED
DATE:
24 OCTOBER 2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
MARTIN
KYLE JOUBERT
Applicant
and
BLACK
RHINO GAME LODGE (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
MIKHAIL
JOUBERT
Second
Respondent
ODETTE
OCTAVIA JOUBERT
Third
Respondent
ODETTE
OCTAVIA JOUBERT N.O.
(In
her capacity as the executrix in the estate late
Hendrik
Petrus Joubert)
Fourth
Respondent
BIG
NAME INVESTMENTS 1025
Fifth
Respondent
CIPC
Sixth
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
Seventh
Respondent
MARMICO
FAMILY TRUST
(IT
12757/96)
Eighth
Respondent
ODETTE
OCTAVIA JOUBERT N.O.
(Trustee
of the Marmico Trust)
Ninth
Respondent
HENDRIK
PETRUS JOUBERT N.O.
Tenth
Respondent
This
judgment is prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected as such and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties / their legal representatives by email and by
uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for handing down is deemed to be 24 October 2024.
JUDGMENT
RETIEF J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
On the 29 August 2023 Hassim AJ, as she then
was, granted an order sought by agreement [the mandatory order].
Emanating from such
mandatory order are two applications which have,
by consent and for the sake of good order to be heard together. One
being a contempt
application brought by the applicant which, has been
struck and removed several times in the urgent court [contempt
relief] and
the other application is brought by the respondents to
stay the execution of alternatively, to rescind the mandatory order
[stay
and recission relief]. ‘For the sake of good order’
soon called for this Court to make a determination on the ranking
order in which these two applications were to be adjudicated. An
important determination considering the effect of each. This aspect
is dealt with below.
[2]
The
mandatory order emanates from an application which was initially
brought by the applicant in July 2023 in which he, in his capacity
as
the director of the first respondent, Black Rhino Lodge (Pty) Ltd
[Black Rhino], the fifth respondent, Big Name Investments
1025 [Big
Name] and as a beneficiary of the eighth respondent, the Marmico
Family Trust, IT12757/96 [Family Trust] sought to declare
his mother,
the third respondent [Odette] and his brother, the second respondent
[Mike] delinquent directors in terms the Companies
Act
[1]
[delinquency relief]
.
The
delinquency relief was met with a counter-application in which Odette
and Mike,
inter
alia
,
attack the applicant’s
locus
standi
as the cited director. The applicant then in August 2023, launched a
separate Part A with the delinquency relief, now referred
to as Part
B in the consolidated form. Part A served before Hassim J, the
mandatory order, the delinquency relief was postponed
and has been
referred to Part B in the main application.
[3]
The contempt relief was launched in October
2023 and the applicant, before the respondents filed their answer
thereto, filed two
further supplementary affidavits. The respondents
filed their answering affidavit in September 2023 and their stay and
recession
relief in February 2024. The respondents too, filed a
further supplementary affidavit. The further affidavits were, with
leave
tendered into evidence.
[4]
The applicant too, moved for an amendment at
the date of hearing of the application. The amendment has not been
filed on caselines.
The notice too, is incorrectly dated as October
2023 and save for setting out the intended amendment as required in
sub-rule 1,
the notice does not accord with rule 28. None the less,
it was unopposed and the amendment was granted to ensure that the
correct
parties were before Court. The fourth respondent as cited,
Hendrik Petrus Joubert, the applicant’s father, passed away
[the
deceased]. The deceased was substituted with Odette, the duly
appointed executrix of the deceased’s estate. The applicant
also sought to amend the amounts claimed in respect of the respective
monetary claims against Odette, Martin and the deceased estate.
[5]
The applications proceeded on the amended
papers, and for clarity the parties will be referred to as cited in
the contempt relief
application.
Ranking
order of the applications
[6]
Counsel
for the applicant invited the Court to consider the matter of
Clipsal
Australia (Pty) Ltd and Others vs Gap Distributors and Others
[2]
[
Clipsal
matter]. In this way the Court was reminded that court orders
are to be obeyed, even if they are wrong, until set
aside. If not,
warned by Goldstein J, chaos would result if people defied orders
with impunity. Counsel submitted further that
to adjudicate the stay
and recission relief before the contempt relief would be the wrong
way round because the respondents had
to purge their contempt first.
The reliance on the Clipsal matter too, was to dilute an anticipated
point to be taken by the respondents.
A similar point which was
successfully argued before Joffe J in the Court
a
quo
,
but which, the SCA rejected in Clipsal. In principle, an issue to be
decided in the main application has nothing to do with whether
a
party is in contempt of a court order and is not relevant to the
enquiry.
In
casu
,
the challenge to applicant’s
locus
standi
as
a director in the counter-application in the main action, the
anticipated point was submitted not to be relevant and not to be
taken into account.
[7]
Counsel for the respondents not arguing the
anticipated point, rather urged this Court to dispense with the stay
and recission relief
first arguing that the contempt relief before
this Court was purely a monetary claim and that to purge the
contempt, if any, was
a mere accounting exercise which could be
resolved at a later stage. Counsel further urged this Court to
consider the human element
in this matter as it concerned personal
contempt within a family unit.
[8]
The
argument raised by the respondents’ Counsel that the contempt
relief was simply a monetary exercise, is an aspect which
required
closer scrutiny to ensure that the principle objective of the
contempt relief is realised if it should succeed.
[3]
This aspect it dealt with in more detail below. However, for present
purposes, the mandatory order consists of 29 prayers. The
prayers
deal with both final and interim relief and include procedural issues
in respect of Part B. It is common cause that some
of the prayers
have
been complied with
but not,
inter
alia
,
prayers 7 and 8. Counsel for the applicant in argument conceded that
the thrust of the contempt relief related to prayers 7 and
8 of the
mandatory order. Prayer 7 is interim relief. In the absence of
further authority for the respondents’ propositions
advanced in
argument, and applying the approach by the SCA in the Clipsal matter,
this Court deals with the contempt relief first.
[9]
Before doing so, and to give context to the
applications before this Court, relevant facts are set out to
give perspective
to the relief sought, the relationship between the
parties and what is meant with reference to ‘the Joubert group
of companies’.
RELEVANT
FACTS
[10]
The Family Trust was registered by the late
Willie Martin Joubert [the founder] in 1996. The founder was the
applicant’s grandfather
and Odette’s father-in law. The
first duly appointed trustees of the Family trust were the founder,
the deceased and Odette.
They have administered the Family trust and
its assets together for almost two decades. The Family trust is a
discretionary trust
with its main object being to administer trust
assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries. The uncontentious
beneficiaries are
the applicant, Mike and their younger minor brother
William Joubert [William]. William is still a minor. Odette in
terms
of an amendment to the trust deed was named a beneficiary. The
amendment and Odette’s appointment as a beneficiary are
contentious
issues raised by the applicant but, are not serving
before this Court.
[11]
Both the deceased and the founder have
subsequently passed away. The present trustees of the Family trust
are Odette, the deceased
and Chris Anagnostellis. The appointment of
Chris Anagnostellis too, is a contentious issue raised by the
applicant but, is not
serving before this Court
.
[12]
Black Rhino and the Big Name are Family trust
assets. Black Rhino the flagship of such assets. The Family trust
owns 100% in Black
Rhino and 67% in Big Name. Odette, Mike and the
applicant are the directors of Black Rhino and the Big Name. The
applicant was
appointed as a director on the 17 November 2022 having
been estranged from the Joubert family for a number of years. It is
common
cause that the applicant has received substantial benefits
from the trust over time. The capacity of Odette and Mike to remain
directors, the subject matter of Part B brought by the applicant in
the delinquency relief.
[13]
According to an uncontentious organogram of the
Joubert group of companies, the correctness thereof admitted, Mike,
Odette, the
deceased and the founder possess/ed their own company
portfolios within the Joubert group of companies. No portfolio
however is
depicted on the organogram for the applicant. The three
Trusts, namely the Joubert, the Family and the Petmar Trust form part
of
the organogram.
[14]
Of further significance is that Odette is
indicated as a director of approximately 23 companies within the
Joubert group of companies
and is a trustee administering 2 out of
the 3 trusts. The deceased, Odette’s late husband was a
director of only 4 of the
companies of which, Odette was a
co-director with him. The deceased a trustee in all 3 of the trusts.
Odette according to the depiction
of the organogram, is and has been
a significant figure head and manager of companies and administrator
of trusts within the Joubert
group of companies.
[15]
Part B, nor the contempt relief is specifically
aimed at Odette’s capacity as a trustee of the Family trust nor
her statutory
and administrative function as the executrix of the
deceased’s estate
.
This
is not to say that the consequences of Part B, if successful will not
have, but for present purposes it is important to note
that it does
not. Against this backdrop the contempt relief.
CONTEMPT
RELIEF
[16]
To
commence it is prudent to highlight and to reinforce that the object
of a contempt order is not an issue
inter
partes
but concerns the dignity of the Court, to vindicate the rule of law.
It is therefore not punishment but compels a contemnor to
comply with
a mandatory court order. In other words, no matter the objectives of
an applicant and presence of personal interest
“
Contempt
of court is not an issue inter partes; it is an issue between the
court and the party who has not complied with a mandatory
order of
court.
”
[4]
This point elaborated by Plasket J in the
Victoria
Park Ratepayers’
[5]
matter
when he expressed the following view in a constitutional context: “
It
is clear that contempt of court is not merely a mechanism for the
enforcement of court orders. The jurisdiction of the Superior
Courts
to commit recalcitrant litigants for contempt of court when they fail
or refuse to obey court orders has at its heart the
very
effectiveness and legitimacy of the judicial system... that, in turn,
means that the court called upon to commit such a litigant
for his or
her contempt is not only dealing with the individual interest of the
frustrated
successful litigant
(own emphasis) but also, as importantly, acting as guardian of the
public interest.
”.
[17]
In argument
as previously mentioned, Counsel for the applicant indicated that he
would
focus
on prayers 7 and 8 of the mandatory order because that really goes to
the heart of the matter, being the personal expenses
and the
repayment of what has been paid. Having regard to the heart of the
contempt relief and the necessity expressed in argument
that Odette
and Mike must purge their contempt, this Court considers the amended
relief. In the amended relief, the applicant seeks
an order declaring
Odette and Mike to be in contempt of Court, he seeks a determination
of monetary claims, on motion from Odette,
Mike and from his father’s
deceased estate, and the committal of Odette and Mike as a sanction
should they fail to pay the
monetary claim within 48 Hours of an
award. Therefore, at the time the applicant launched the urgent
contempt relief in October
2023, the applicant in respect of the
heart of the contempt, prayers 7 and 8, albeit frustrated, could not
have been a “
-
successful litigant
-“
as referred to by Plasket J in the Victoria Park Ratepayers
matter.
[6]
This is because the
monetary claim still had to established and awarded. The applicant’s
entitlement to repayment was to
be established by the determination
of a contempt finding of prayer 7 and the amount, a claim still to be
determined. His success
not immediately evident. Prayer 8 stated
that:
“
If
it is established
(own emphasis) that the payment was not
a liability of the first, fifth or eighth respondent and made to or
on behalf of the applicant,
second, third or fourth respondent, (with
reference to the interim interdictory relief in prayer 7-own
emphasis) the party receiving
the monies shall make repayment to the
first respondent, fifth respondent or eighth respondent as
applicable.”
[18]
To expand the reasoning, because the repayment
of money had not been established nor awarded against Odette and
Mike, the applicant
at the time the application was launched had no
reason to call for contempt as there was none to purge, as was
submitted. There
too was no reason to call for their committal yet.
The cart is before the horse. The mere notion of a possible repayment
without
an award in your favour can never be seen as purging your
contempt. In consequence, the repayment triggered by prayer 7 yet to
be awarded, is not the sanction for disobedience. Committal for
non-compliance to repay an award is. The applicant knew this, yet
persisted. This is why the applicant had to try and remedy his
position, to do that, the applicant introduced prayer 9 in the
contempt relief. Prayer 9 states:
“
9.
In the event that the Second and/or the Third Respondents fail to
repay the said funds within 48 hours of the
granting of
this
order
(contempt relief-own emphasis) then the Second and
the Third Respondents are to be sentenced to 60 days imprisonment
which sentence
is wholly suspended pending compliance with
the
court order
”
(own emphasis)
[19]
Reference
to ‘the order’ and ‘this order’ in prayer 9
can only be the contempt relief. The committal to
60 days
imprisonment is the sanction sought, such sanction is only coupled to
the respondents’ failure to pay the monetary
claim, within 48
hours once awarded. The applicant does not seek a sanction for the
respondents’ non-compliance to do something/perform
(
ad
factum praestandum
),
not even with regard to any of the other prayers of the mandatory
order mentioned in the founding papers. In other words, to
desist
from their actions in prayers 5 and 6 of the mandatory order. In
contrast, the applicant seeks compliance with the payment
of a
monetary claim only, and a criminal sanction to follow such
disobedience if not paid within 48 hours of payment (
ad
pecuniuam solvendam
).
It is trite that the common law draws a sharp distinction between
these two types of orders and that failure to comply with an
order to
pay money as requested by the applicant is not regarded as a contempt
of court, whereas disobedience of a person to perform,
as Jafta J (as
he then was) in the
Mjeni
matter
[7]
endorsing a long line of authority that, an order must be
ad
factum praestandum
before the Court can enforce it by means of committal. The
Constitutional Court agreed with the court’s findings in
the Mjeni matter confirming both the common law distinction and the
comments of Jafta J.
[20]
The applicant’s Counsel is correct that
prayers 7 and 8 lie at the heart of the applicant’s contempt
relief, this too
is borne out from the applicant’s evidence and
his concern that Odette and Mike’s personal expenses are paid
by the
Family trust and Black Rhino lodge. However, with the contempt
relief the applicant is not moving for an order to vindicate the
court’s dignity but to establish and seek repayment of those
expenses which are personal of nature, relying only on the
contemptuous failure by Odette and Mike to repay it once determined.
This is further bolstered by the applicant’s inability
to forgo
the monetary claim against his father’s deceased estate in the
contempt application in circumstances where no declarator
of contempt
sought. Of significance then, the prospect that Odette
and Mikes will be indebted and fail to pay, is the
only reason relied
by the applicant in his amended relief warranting the contempt relief
and the call for this Court to commit
his mother and brother.
Committal the only sanction the applicant seeks.
[21]
The contempt relief has not been brought to
vindicate the Court’s dignity but an attempt to vindicate the
applicant who seeks
to enforce a monetary claim to be awarded, on
motion and adjudicated in contempt proceedings. This is not the
object of contempt
proceedings. No alternative relief was advanced
nor did Counsel only move for a declarator. The basis and thrust of
the contempt
relief is clear on the papers and bolstered in argument:
the repayment of personal expenses back to the Family Trust and Black
Rhino or face the consequences, committal.
[22]
The contempt relief must fail. The
Court now deals with the rescission and stay relief.
RESCISSION,
ALTERNATIVELY STAY RELIEF
[23]
The respondents in their notice of motion seek
to rescind, not vary the mandatory order alternatively, that the
mandatory order
be stayed pending the determination of the
delinquency relief and counter application. The basis and facts are
now dealt with.
What
are the grounds relied on to rescind the order
?
[24]
The
respondents’ founding papers rely on a change of circumstances
and ambiguity of phrases in the mandatory order as the
grounds for
rescission. No authority for the change in circumstances as a basis
for the recission of a judgment was provided. However,
as to
ambiguity and on the basis that the interpretation of the order
is ineffective and leaves doubt as to what the order
requires,
leaving a discretion by the person who applies it, the respondents
relied on the Constitutional matter of
Eva
v Parsons
.
[8]
This Court, in the heads of argument, was specifically referred to
paragraph 65 E-G, in the minority judgment by Jafta J. This
paragraph
deals with a Court’s powers and the exercise its discretion to
ensure that effective orders are granted in circumstances
when
parties wish to make a settlement agreement an order of Court. The
respondents in their founding papers do not rely on the
manner in
which Hassim J exercised her discretion on the 29 August 2023 to
ensure that an effective order was granted which was
not ambiguous.
The papers are silent. The papers speak more to what occurred after
the mandatory order was granted. The basis for
such relief with
reference to the
Eva
v Parsons
matter misplaced and on this basis for want of another competent
basis must fail.
[25]
Notwithstanding, in the papers, reference to
ambiguity is made with reference to the mandatory order itself. Such
being prayers
4-8 and 12. Reliance was placed on the use of phrases
of “
fiduciary duties
”,
“
major decisions
”,
“
personal expenses
”,
“
human resources function
”
and “
integral in
decision-making functions
”.
[26]
Applying
rule 42, although not specifically raised, as it caters for the
rescission of an order where there is an ambiguity, but
only to the
extent of such ambiguity. In other words, the sub-rule caters for
where the judgment or order does not reflect the
intention of the
judicial officer pronouncing it.
[9]
This is not the case, nor the reasons relied on. The mandatory order
was granted by agreement and in the content agreed to by them.
In
circumstances when all the parties were legally represented. The
recission relief on this ground must fail.
Should
the mandatory order be stayed
?
[27]
The respondents rely on rule 45A and the common
law in their founding papers. Rule 45A directs that a Court may
suspend any order.
This is besides a Court’s inherent
jurisdiction to do so should an injustice be done if the order should
not be stayed for
a period of time.
[28]
Returning
to the Clipsal matter the SCA stated that the Court possessed an
equitable discretion to be exercised sparingly and in
exceptional
circumstances. The exceptional circumstances in this matter raised by
the respondent’s Counsel were the human
and family factor in
this application. A Court when exercising its discretion is not
only bound by the facts relied in argument
but must consider all the
facts and circumstances of the matter before it. This Court too
considers the evidence relied on and
the guidance of the factors set
out in
Gois
t/a Shakespeare’s Pub vs Van Zyl
[10]
[Gois matter].
[29]
Of importance too, is that all the parties
committed themselves to motion proceedings. In considering the choice
and the acrimonious
Part B, loomed the fact that the parties are in a
family dispute about the Family trust and trust assets. A dispute
which has escalated
into ‘family warfare’. The disputes
not only appear to relate to the applicant being a director of Black
Rhino and
Big Name, but whether Odette Mike stand to be declared are
delinquent directors and the consequences which follow such a
declaration.
Such foreshadowed in the relief of Part B, damages and
Odette’s ability to hold other
ex
officio
positions. The ripple effect
according to the organogram will send a shock wave. Central to this
appreciation must surely have
been the foreseeable reactions between
the family members who on these papers have, been referred to as
idiots. Each party in the
papers asserting their own reasons for the
justification and in certain cases, on their admission in
non-compliance of the mandatory
order themselves. This surely is an
illustration the ineffectiveness of the mandatory order, a reason
quiet apart from the alleged
ambiguities therein.
Why
is the mandatory order ineffective
?
[30]
The answer to this question is actually rather
simple and has already been answered by the parties themselves by
their assertion
of their own justifications. The crux appears to be
the lens through which each party views the mandatory order itself.
The lens
through which it is viewed, appears to be dictated by the
reason, the intent each party had when the mandatory order was
entertained
and agreed to. Odette records in her papers that it was
means for a truce and as her Counsel put it in argument, a ceasefire
until
Part B was determined. Conversely, applicant’s intent
according to his Counsel was not a truce. This too is borne out from
the papers and it incapsulated from the premise through which he
views Odette and Mike and a possible ‘truce’. The
applicant states under oath that: “
-
the third respondent (Odette – own emphasis) is an idiot who
can take no responsibility for her own conduct – and
the
problem in the matter rests in the delusions and naïve mannerism
of the respondents (Odette and Mike) who lack insight
or intelligence
to understand how a company or a Trust is supposed to operate -
”.
The possibility of a ceasefire or truce not capable, intent polar
opposite and the ability to have a meeting of minds under
these
circumstances not possible. The comfort that further or retaliative
actions won’t be taken by either party based on
the mandatory
order, pending the finalisation of the delinquent relief is not
apparent.
[31]
As raised, the mandatory order does not bind
Odette in her capacity as a trustee of the Family trust nor as an
executrix but, in
her capacity personal and capacity as a director.
As a trustee she too exercises a discretion over the benefits of
Mike, the applicant
and William. William is a minor and his best
interests have not even been considered nor featured in these papers.
A best interest
right this Court must consider as the benefits
flowing from the Family trust to him v
ia
his mother Odette in her capacity as trustee of the Family trust and
requested by her, in her capacity as is legal guardian, will
only
entail benefits of a personal nature. In consequence, personal
expenses, a possible contempt alert for the applicant as Odette
would
have authorised the transaction. Bolstered is the fact that Odette
views the trust assets working for the trust to benefit
the
beneficiaries. This view is denied by the applicant. William is not
to be prejudiced by the lens through which these parties
view each
other and apply the mandatory order.
[32]
Returning to the application of the mandatory
order to illustrate a point. Both Odette and the applicant hold their
own views of
how prayer 6, for example should be actioned. Odette
contends that the applicant, interprets the mandatory order according
to his
own intentions. To illustrate the point, prayer 6 states that:
“
Pending the final
determination of the matter all payments to be made by the first
respondent (Black Rhino), fifth respondent (Big
Five) and eighth
respondent (Family Trust) shall be circulated first to the applicant
and thereafter to the second and third respondents
(Mike and Odette)
and subsequently authorised by the third respondent (Odette) alone
”.
[33]
A logical interpretation is a ranking notice
order in terms of which notice of all payments made by Black Rhino,
Big Name and the
Family trust, must come to the attention of the
applicant and thereafter Mike and Odette. Odette alone is authorised
to make such
payments. No authorisation, meaning consent, of all
payments is given to the applicant. The applicant in support of the
contempt
relief contends that personal payments are made without his
consent.
[34]
Odette contends that the applicant
misinterprets the clause by insisting that he must be given express
consent before personal payments
can be made. When this was raised in
answer, in reply the applicant then agrees with Odette stating that
“
I don’t think my consent
is necessary but the order is explicit that NO personal expenses may
be paid and I object on the
group to the payment of personal expenses
because this is theft in my respectful opinion and a contravention of
the court order
”.
[35]
Personal opinions mask the effectiveness of the
order. The mandatory order is not effective, the position and actions
and attitudes
by all the parties prior to the mandatory order has
remained much the same. Prejudice and harm to all established
and foreseeable,
including harm and prejudice to William. The ripple
effect of repetitive litigation exhausting, including financial. The
circumstances
and the family dynamics of the Joubert’s are
exceptional. This Court has carefully considered all the facts and
factors considered
in the Gois matter and considers that it is just
and equitable that the mandatory order be stayed pending the outcome
of the delinquent
relief.
COSTS
[36]
There is no reason why the costs should not
follow the result. Both Counsel did not move for another cost order
and both argued
for scale C.
[37]
The following order:
1.
The Applicant’s application is dismissed.
2.
The execution of the order handed down by Hassim AJ on the 29 August
2023 is stayed
pending the finalisation of Part B, in the main
application.
3.
The Applicant is to pay the Respondents’ costs, costs to
include the cost
of two Counsel, taxed on scale C.
L.A.
RETIEF
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
JP Vorster SC
Email:
vorsterj@law.co.za
Cell:
072 288 6927
Adv T
Odendaal
Email:
tatum@chambersa.co.za
Cell:
083 451 9568
Instructed
by attorneys:
Joshua
Lazarus Incorporated
Email:
joshua@lazarusjoshuaattorneys.com
Tel:
079 494 8019
For
Respondent 1 to 5 & 8 to10:
Adv
Henno Viljoen
Email:
hmviljoen@law.co.za
Cell:
083 400 1620
Adv
Nikola Daniels
Email:
ndaniels@maisels.co.za
Cell:
083 604 0357
Instructed
by attorneys:
OWP
Attorneys
Brett
Tate
Email:
brett.tate@owppartners.com
Cell:
082 331 3110
Date
of hearing:
27
August 2024
Date
of judgment
:
24
October
2024
[1]
Section
162 of
Act
71 of 2008.
[2]
2010
(2) SA 289
(SCA) at [22] referring to what Goldstein J said in the
Culverwell
v Beira
1992 (4) SA 490
(W) at 494 A-E.
[3]
Minority
judgment
,
Eke v Parsons
at para 65.
[4]
Federation
of Governing Bodies of South African Schools (Gauteng) v MEC for
Education, Gauteng
2002
(1) SA 660
(T) at 673D-E (Southwood and Basson JJ concurring).
[5]
Victoria
Park Ratepayers’ Association
[2004] 3 All SA 633.
[6]
Ibid.
[7]
Mjeni
v Minister of Health and Welfare, Eastern Cape
2000 (4) SA 446
(Tk) at 451D-E.
[8]
2016
(3) SA 37 (CC).
[9]
Zondi
v MEC, Traditional and Local Government Affairs
2006 (3) SA (CC) at 12 G-H.
[10]
2011
(1) SA 148
(LC)AT 155 H-156B. a court will stay the execution of an
order where real and substantial justice requires it or where
injustice
would otherwise result. Guided by factors usually
applicable in interim interdicts.
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