Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 519South Africa
Glen Life Development Company CC v Monaghan Farm Homeowners Association NPO and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 519; 007217/2022 (23 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Glen Life Development Company CC v Monaghan Farm Homeowners Association NPO and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 519; 007217/2022 (23 June 2023)
Glen Life Development Company CC v Monaghan Farm Homeowners Association NPO and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 519; 007217/2022 (23 June 2023)
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sino date 23 June 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Case
Number:007217/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
23 JUNE 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
GLEN
LIFE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY CC
Applicant
and
MONAGHAN
FARM HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION NPO
First Respondent
SHERIFF
RANDBURG WEST
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SC
VIVIAN AJ
1.
This application concerns the alleged right of the First Respondent
to deny the
Applicant access to a residential housing estate in
Lanseria (“the estate”). In my view, the First Respondent
has shown
no basis in law for it to deny the Applicant access to the
estate. The First Respondent has a legitimate reason for wanting
access
– it intends to show immovable property (“the
property”) situated within the estate to potential purchasers
and
to valuers in order to discharge its contractual obligation to
obtain a guarantee from a financial institution. In order to
discharge
its contractual obligation, it requires access to the
property. The Second Respondent is contractually obliged to allow the
Applicant
such access and has raised no objection to the Applicant
gaining such access. The First Respondent’s conduct is what is
preventing
the Applicant from gaining access to the property. This
constitutes wrongful interference in the contractual relationship
between
the Applicant and the Second Respondent.
2.
Only the First Respondent opposes this application.
3.
There are preliminary issues. The First Respondent sought condonation
for the
late filing of its answering affidavit, which was granted for
the reasons that follow. The First Respondent raised three points
in
limine
, which were each dismissed for the reasons set out below.
Condonation
4.
At the outset of the hearing, the First Respondent applied for
condonation for
the late delivery of its answering affidavit.
Unsurprisingly, the Applicant opposed the application for
condonation. The explanation
offered was weak and did not cover the
entire period of delay.
5.
Nonetheless, I agree with Mr Luyt, who appeared for the First
Applicant that
the only prejudice suffered by the Applicant was
delay. The prejudice to the First Respondent in not having its
version before
the Court would be significant.
6.
In reply, Mr Luyt informed me that he was instructed to tender costs
of the application
for condonation on the attorney and client scale.
7.
Having considered the matter and weighed the prejudice to the
parties, condoned
the late filing of the answering affidavit and
ordered the First Respondent to pay the costs of the application for
condonation
on the attorney and client scale.
The
relevant facts
8.
The Applicant is the purchaser of the property in terms of a contract
of sale
entered into between the Applicant and the Second Respondent
following a sale in execution on 18 January 2022. The property is an
undeveloped erf situated within the estate.
9.
The First Respondent controls access to the estate. Before the
auction sale,
Mr Sinwamali, who is the sole member of the Applicant,
went to the offices of the First Respondent and spoke to Mr Chandré
Buys, the estate manager, in order to ascertain the extent of the
outstanding levies owed by the owner of the property to the First
Respondent. After the auction, Mr Sinwamali returned to the offices
of the First Respondent. He informed Mr Buys that the Applicant
would
on-sell the undeveloped erf or develop it and then sell the developed
erf. Mr Buys said that if the Applicant elected to
on-sell the
undeveloped erf, he recommended that the Applicant use a particular
estate agent who resides within the estate.
10.
Mr Sinwamali asked that his number be added to the estate intercom
system, but Mr Buys refused
and said that the Applicant’s
representatives would only be granted access through him and that he
would generate a visitor
code for them to enter the estate.
11.
Access codes were generated over the following weekend. The Applicant
was able to show the property
to potential purchasers. It is common
cause that these viewings proceeded without incident.
12.
However, when Mr Sinwamali contacted Mr Buys on 31 January 2022 to
ask for further codes to again
show the property to prospective
purchasers, Mr Buys declined to do so. Access was then refused on a
number of occasions.
13.
In terms of the conditions of sale, the Applicant paid a 10% deposit
and was required to secure
the balance of the
purchase
price within 21 days after the date of sale. The Applicant did not do
so. The effect is that the applicant is in breach
of the contract of
sale entered into between the Applicant and the Second Respondent.
14.
On 18 February 2022, the Second Respondent’s attorneys sent an
email to the Applicant in
which they pointed out that the Applicant
was in breach of the conditions of sale and said that they were
instructed to place the
Applicant on terms and to launch an
application for the cancellation of the sale. They also said that
their client’s position
was that the issue of access is a
matter between the Applicant and the First Respondent.
15.
On 6 June 2022, the Applicant’s attorneys wrote to the First
Respondent. They drew attention
to the Applicant’s contractual
obligation to secure the balance of the purchase price and said that
the Applicant required
access to the property in order to fulfil this
obligation.
16.
On 8 June 2022, the First Respondent’s attorneys replied to the
letter. The author of the
letter, Mr van Rensburg, recorded that he
was present at the auction and was in possession of a copy of the
conditions of sale.
He said that management of the First Respondent
had granted access to the Applicant as an indulgence and following
the relevant
security protocols. However, it had then become clear to
management that the Applicant intended to on-sell the property, which
Mr van Rensburg said was prohibited by the conditions of sale. Mr van
Rensburg recorded that the relationships between the officials
of the
Applicant and management of the First Respondent had become strained
“…
and as such the indulgence was withdrawn.
”
17.
Mr van Rensburg then said that the information that they had received
from the execution creditor
was that it was applying for the
cancellation of the sale and that the application was at an advanced
stage. Accordingly, the First
Respondent’s attorneys could see
no reason to reply to the demand.
18.
On 14 June 2022, the Second Respondent launched an application for
cancellation of the sale in
the Johannesburg Seat of this Division.
The execution creditor, Standard Bank, is cited as a respondent in
the cancellation. The
Applicant received notice of the Second
Respondent’s application and is opposing the cancellation. The
cancellation application
has not yet been heard.
19.
In terms of Rule 46(11), if the purchaser of immovable property in
execution fails to comply with
conditions of sale, the sale may be
cancelled by a Judge summarily on the report of the sheriff
conducting the sale, on due notice
to the purchaser. The decision to
ask for cancellation is made by the sheriff, not the execution
creditor. Whilst such cancellations
were previously done by a Judge
in chambers, in terms of the Judge President’s Practice
Directive of 18 April 2019, applications
for cancellation in terms of
Rule 46(11) in this Division are now set down in the interlocutory
court.
Lis
Alibi Pendens
20.
The First Respondent relies on the dilatory defence of
lis alibi
pendens.
The argument is that the Applicant and the Second
Respondent are parties to pending litigation, namely the cancellation
application.
21.
Mr Luyt submits that the cancellation application is premised on the
same cause of action and
the same subject matter as this application.
22.
In
Caeserstone
, Wallis JA explained that there are
traditionally three elements to the defence of
lis alibi pendens
,
namely:
22.1.
The litigation is between the same parties;
22.2.
The same cause of action;
22.3.
The same
relief is sought in both matters.
[1]
23.
Each of the
three requirements can be relaxed in appropriate circumstances. In
respect of the same cause of action requirement,
Wallis JA held: “…
the
requirement of the same cause of action is satisfied if the other
proceedings involve the determination of a question that is
necessary
for the determination of the case in which the plea is raised and
substantially determinative of the outcome of that
latter case.
”
[2]
24.
The key issue in the cancellation application is the breach of the
conditions of sale by the Applicant
and whether the sale should be
cancelled. The key issue in this application is whether the First
Respondent is entitled to prevent
the Applicant from gaining access
to the estate and accordingly to the property that is the subject of
the sale.
25.
I accept that, if the sale is cancelled, then the Applicant will not
have a legitimate reason
to gain access to the property. But that is
where the similarity ends. The parties to the cancellation
application are not the
same as the parties to this application. The
relief is different. The parties to the two matters are not
identical.
26.
In my view, the requirement of same cause of action, even in its
relaxed form, is not met.
27.
Accordingly, the defence of
lis alibi pendens
must fail.
Non-joinder
28.
The First Respondent says that Standard Bank should have been joined
in this application. Standard
Bank is the execution creditor at whose
instance the property was attached and sold in execution by the
Second Respondent.
29.
Standard Bank is joined as a respondent in the cancellation
application, though the reasons for
this are not clear to me.
30.
A defence
of non-joinder will only be upheld if the joinder of the party is a
matter of necessity. Joinder is a matter of necessity
only if the “…
party
has a direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of the
litigation which may prejudice the party that has not been
joined.
”
[3]
31.
As I have held above, the key issue in this application is whether
the First Respondent is entitled
to prevent the Applicant from
gaining access to the estate and accordingly to the property that is
the subject of the sale. Standard
Bank’s rights will not be
prejudiced by the decision in this application.
32.
In his heads of argument, Mr Luyt argued that the Applicant levelled
serious allegations against
Standard Bank in its founding affidavit,
which Standard Bank should be called upon to answer. As I understand
the point, it is
that the Applicant says that the First Respondent
was in regular contact with Standard Bank’s attorneys, which
“
raises suspicions
”. Moreover, neither the Second
Respondent’s attorneys nor Standard Bank’s attorneys have
informed the First Respondent
that it should grant access to the
property.
33.
The problem
with this reasoning is that, in order for a party to be joined in
litigation, it must have a direct and substantial
interest in the
outcome of the litigation. The fact that serious allegations are made
against it in the evidence before the Court
is not a reason for a
party to be joined in the litigation.
[4]
34.
Accordingly, the defence of non-joinder must fail.
Proper
Service
35.
The final point
in limine
is that the application was served
on the First Respondent’s attorneys rather than at its
registered address or principal
place of business as required in
terms of Rule 4(1)(a)(v).
36.
I drew Mr
Luyt’s attention to the judgment of Flemming DJP in
O’Sullivan
v Heads Model Agency
.
[5]
To paraphrase the learned Deputy Judge President: the notice of
motion and founding affidavit in this matter were an invitation
to a
party. The First Respondent received the invitation to the party and
responded in the appropriate way, by delivering a notice
of intention
to oppose and an answering affidavit (albeit late). The First
Respondent duly arrived at the party, represented by
Mr Luyt. The
purpose of service was accordingly achieved.
37.
In
Viker X
, Adams AJ held:
“
The purpose of
rule 4 is to provide for a mechanism by which relative certainty can
be obtained that service has been effected upon
a defendant. If
certain minimum standards are complied with as set out in the rule,
then the assumption is made that the service
was sufficient to reach
the defendant's attention and his failure to take steps is not due to
the fact that he does not have knowledge
of the summons. The converse
is not true — namely that if service is not effected as
required by the rule, the service is
not effective — in that
the purpose for which service is required was fulfilled, namely the
defendant came to know of the
summons. The rules, as was pointed out
by Roux J in United Reflective Converters (Pty) Ltd v Levine, 1
988
(4) SA 460
(W), set out procedural steps. They do not create
substantive law. Insofar as the substantive law is concerned, the
requirement
is that a person who is being sued should receive notice
of the fact that he is being sued by way of delivery to him of the
relevant
document initiating legal proceedings. If this purpose is
achieved, then, albeit not in terms of the rules, there has been
proper
service.
”
[6]
38.
The purpose of service having been achieved, there is no merit in
this point
in limine
.
Merits
39.
The central question is: does the First Respondent have a right to
refuse the Applicant access
to the estate and accordingly the
property?
40.
The Applicant and its member have the right of freedom of movement in
terms of Section 21 of the
Constitution. Anyone who seeks to prevent
them from entering a particular area must show that they have the
lawful right to do
so. Further, the Applicant has a contractual right
to access the property in order to comply with its contractual
obligations.
The First Respondent’s conduct unlawfully
interferes with that right.
41.
The First Respondent has not explained why, as a matter of law, it is
entitled to prevent the
Applicant from gaining access to the estate.
It did not produce a copy of its Memorandum of Incorporation. It did
not explain the
legal basis upon which it controls access to the
estate. The First Respondent has provided no information whatsoever
about the
estate. How was it established? Is it a private township?
What were the terms of the township approval? Are the roads within
the
estate public or private roads?
42.
This lack
of evidence can be compared to the evidence that was before the Court
in
Mount
Edgecombe
.
[7]
That case concerned the right of a homeowners association to impose
sanctions on its members for exceeding speed limits on roads
within a
gated estate. It is apparent from the judgment that the evidence
before the Court included the Memorandum of Incorporation,
the
Conduct Rules and the township approval. In this case, the First
Respondent has elected not to produce any such evidence.
43.
The First Respondent does not explain in its answering affidavit why
it assets that it has a right
to prevent the Applicant from gaining
access to the estate.
44.
The First Respondent instead says that it has a duty to keep all the
residents in the estate safe
and that, in doing so, it cannot allow
access to the Applicant “…
or any of its agents,
potential buyers, estate agents, valuers, maintenance persons and/or
electricians.
” Quite why this is so is not explained.
45.
The First Respondent does not say why it has such a duty. If the duty
arises from its Memorandum
of Incorporation, then that document
should have been produced and relied upon. Moreover, as Mr Sithole
(who appeared for the Applicant)
pointed out, the First Respondent
initially allowed the Applicant and potential buyers access to the
estate. It is undisputed that
there were no security incidents
arising from such access.
46.
In its answering affidavit, the First Respondent relies on the
conditions of sale. It points out
that the Second Respondent has
applied to have the sale cancelled and that the application is still
pending.
47.
The First Respondent concludes that this means that the Applicant has
no right to gain access
to the estate “…
because it
is not the owner, nor will it become the owner of the immovable
property.
” The First Respondent accordingly assumes that
the Judge hearing the cancellation application will cancel the sale.
But that
is not an assumption that either the First Respondent or I
can make.
48.
The Applicant is in breach of the conditions of sale and the
cancellation application is pending.
But while it is pending, the
contract of sale remains in force. The Applicant may be able to
comply with its obligations in terms
of the conditions of sale before
the cancellation application is heard. The Applicant says that the
First Respondent’s conduct
is preventing it from complying with
the conditions of sale.
49.
The First Respondent says in the answering affidavit that the
decision to refuse access was made
because the Applicant wass in
breach of the conditions of sale and the Second Respondent had
elected to seek cancellation of the
sale. But the decision to refuse
access was taken on or before 31 January 2022. This was before the
guarantee was due. Accordingly,
as at 31 January 2022, the Applicant
was not in breach of the conditions of sale. The cancellation
application was only launched
in June 2022.
50.
Accordingly, the decision must have been made for a different reason
to that asserted under oath
in the answering affidavit. The 8 June
letter gives a different reason – the assertion that the
so-called indulgence was
withdrawn because the conditions of sale
prohibited the Applicant from on-selling the property. It is
significant that this reason
is not persisted with in the answering
affidavit.
51.
The 8 June reason is in any event without merit. First, on the common
cause facts, the First Respondent
allowed the Applicant access for
purpose of showing the property to potential purchasers and only
subsequently refused to do so.
52.
Second, it is of course not for the First Respondent to enforce
compliance by the Applicant with
the terms of the conditions of sale.
There is no contractual privity between the First Respondent and the
parties to the contract.
53.
Third, the conditions of sale do not prohibit the Applicant from
on-selling the property. Clause
3.3 provides that the purchaser may
not nominate a third party to take transfer in its stead. But this
does not prevent the Applicant
from selling the property to a third
party even before ownership is transferred to it.
54.
It is trite
that a non-owner can enter into a contract in terms of which it sells
property to a third party, even without the owner’s
consent.
The seller is then obliged to deliver the property to the third party
purchaser.
[8]
In this case, the
Applicant, in the expectation that it will be in a position to
deliver the property to the third party purchaser,
is not prohibited
from on-selling the property.
[9]
55.
The Applicant explained in its founding affidavit that its business
model was to purchase distressed
properties and then to on-sell them.
It is preferable for the Applicant to sell the property as quickly as
property, ideally such
that there are simultaneous transfers from the
original seller to the Applicant and then to the final purchaser. If
the Applicant
cannot sell the property quickly, it needs to obtain a
guarantee from a financial institution. This will only happen if a
valuer
appointed by the financial institution is able to view the
property. But if the Applicant manages to sell the property quickly,
it can then rely on the security from the second sale to obtain
security for the original sale.
56.
The Second Respondent, as seller, is aware of the Applicant’s
intention and has not objected
to the Applicant seeking to on-sell
the property.
57.
In his
heads of argument, Mr Sithole submitted that it is the Second
Respondent who has the real right in the property which entitles
the
Second Respondent to sell the property in execution.
[10]
The Second Respondent is the seller and is obliged to perform his
obligations in terms of the sale, including but not limited to
the
obligation to give transfer to the Applicant.
[11]
58.
I agree
with Mr Sithole’s submissions. Moreover, the Second Respondent,
as seller, is obliged to co-operate with the Applicant
in order to
allow the Applicant to perform its contractual obligations. The
failure to do so would constitute
mora
creditoris
and
accordingly entitled the Applicant to contractual remedies, including
an order for specific performance.
[12]
Accordingly, if it was the Second Respondent that was refusing the
allow the Applicant access to the property, the Applicant would
be
entitled to an order for specific performance.
59.
However, the Second Respondent is not preventing the Applicant from
gaining access to the property.
It is the First Respondent that is
doing so.
60.
All that stands in the way of the Applicant is the refusal of the
First Respondent to allow him
access to the property.
61.
The First Respondent is aware not only of the existence of the
contract but also of its terms.
The First Respondent knows that the
Applicant has a contractual obligation to furnish the Second
Respondent with a guarantee for
the balance of the purchase price. In
its founding affidavit the Applicant says that, because the First
Respondent refuses to allow
even a valuer from a bank to view the
property, the Applicant cannot comply with this obligation.
62.
In response, the First Respondent says that it was willing to allow
any financial institution’s
representative access to the
property in order to confirm the value thereof, but the Applicant was
negligent in failing to act
speedily to obtain a loan in order to
secure the balance of the purchase price. As is clear from Mr van
Rensburg’s letter
of 8 June 2023, the First Respondent is now
not prepared to allow a valuer access to the property. No reason is
given for this
apparent change in its stance.
63.
The effect is to prevent the Applicant from complying with its
contractual obligations. The Applicant
says in its founding affidavit
that this constitutes interference in its contract with the First
Respondent.
64.
In
Lanco
,
[13]
the plaintiff hired a property in terms of a lease with the owner of
the property. The defendant, who had been a tenant in the
property,
held over. This usurped the plaintiff’s right in terms of its
lease agreement. The plaintiff successfully claimed
damages under the
actio
legis Aquiliae.
Galgut J held that the defendant’s conduct was wrongful despite
the fact that, on the facts of that case, the defendant had
not
induced the owner to breach the lease agreement. This was not a
necessary requirement.
[14]
Lanco
was
referred to with apparent approval by Khampepe J in
Country
Cloud
.
[15]
65.
In
Masstores
,
[16]
Froneman J referred to the decisions in
Lanco
and
Country
Cloud
.
He held:
“
The lesson to
be learnt from these cases is not that the mere interference or
deprivation of a contractual right by a third party
is sufficient to
establish the wrongfulness of interference, but that the nature of
the interest protected by the contractual right
is of crucial
importance. If the nature of the interest is of the kind that
commands protection against the whole world, and not
only the
protection afforded to the contracting parties themselves by the
provisions of the contract, interference by third parties
is more
likely to be found wrongful than otherwise.
”
[17]
66.
In my view, the nature of the interest protected by the contractual
right is not an exclusive
one. It will not assist the Applicant to
simply pursue a contractual remedy against the Second Respondent. The
Applicant cannot
gain access to the property without the cooperation
of the First Respondent. This makes this matter distinguishable from
Masstores
. Accordingly, the interference by the First
Respondent in the exercise by the Applicant of its contractual rights
is wrongful.
67.
In the premises, (1) the First Respondent has produced no evidence to
show that it has a right
to prevent the Applicant from accessing the
estate and (2) the First Respondent is in any event unlawfully
interfering in the contract
between the Applicant and the Second
Respondent.
Conclusion
68.
The Applicant has accordingly made out a case for a mandatory
interdict.
69.
Mr Sithole conceded that the relief sought in the notice was widely
phrased and instead sought
more narrowly formulated relief as set out
in a draft order. I have considered the draft order, but am of the
view that the relief
sought in that order is still too widely
phrased. It also makes provision for access to buildings and for
access by an electrician,
neither of which is appropriate for an
undeveloped erf. I accordingly grant narrower relief.
70.
Mr Sithole informed me that the Applicant is content with supervised
access. In my view, it is
unnecessary to expressly provide for this
in the order. The First Respondent will take whatever security
measures it considers
reasonably necessary to ensure that the
Applicant and its invitees confine their access to the estate to
viewing the property.
71.
The Applicant sought an order to the effect that, if the First
Respondent does not comply with
the terms of the order, the Sheriff
or the South African Police Services is authorised and directed to do
all things necessary
in order to allow access as per the terms of the
court order. In my view, it is not appropriate to grant such an
order. Should
the First Respondent fail to comply with my order, that
would constitute contempt of court, and the Applicant then has its
remedies
against the First Respondent and whichever of its
representatives are responsible for its failure to comply with the
order. However,
I can and do assume that the First Respondent will
comply with the terms of my order.
72.
Mr Sithole sought costs on the party and party scale. I agree that
the First Respondent should
be ordered to pay the costs of the
application.
73.
I accordingly make the following order:
73.1.
The late filing of the answering affidavit is condoned.
73.2.
The First Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application
for condonation on
the scale as between attorney and client.
73.3.
The First Respondent is ordered to grant the Applicant, its staff and
estate agents duly
mandated by the Applicant, together with the
Applicant’s prospective purchasers and their families, and
valuators appointed
by a financial institution, reasonable access to
the property situated at Monaghan Farm Ext 1[...] Monaghan Farm,
A[...] Road,
Lanseria, Gauteng (‘the property’), at all
reasonable times to enter and view the property.
73.4.
Reasonable times shall be interpreted to mean between the hours of
08h00 and 17h00 on
weekdays and between the hours of 08h00 and 15h00
on public holidays and weekends.
73.5.
The First Respondent may require any persons granted access to the
property in terms of
paragraph 73.3 above to produce proof of
identity before being permitted to access the property.
73.6.
The First Respondent is to pay the Applicant’s costs of this
application.
Vivian,
AJ
Acting
Judge of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South Africa
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Advocate Wesley
Sithole
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
Advocate Marcel
Luyt
Date
of hearing: 01 June 2023
Date
delivered: 23 June
2023
[1]
CAESARSTONE
SDOT-YAM v WORLD OF MARBLE AND GRANITE
2000
2013 (6) SA 499 (SCA) at para 12
[2]
CAESARSTONE
SDOT-YAM v WORLD OF MARBLE AND GRANITE 2000
,
supra
at para 21
[3]
Absa Bank Ltd v Naude NO and Others
2016 (6) SA 540
(SCA) at para 10
[4]
Compare:
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) at para 85
[5]
O'Sullivan
v Heads Model Agency CC
1995 (4) SA 253
(W) at 255 H
[6]
Investec
Property Fund Limited v Viker X (Pty) Limited and Another
(2016/07492) [2016] ZAGPJHC 108 (10 May 2016)
[7]
Mount
Edgecombe Country Club Estate Management Association II RF NPC v
Singh and Others
2019 (4) SA 471 (SCA)
[8]
Ensor
v Kader
1960 (3) SA 458
(D) at 459 H; S v Commissioner of Taxes
1984
(3) SA 584
(ZS) at 587 E
[9]
[10]
Dream
Supreme Properties 11CC v Nedcor Bank Ltd and Others
2007 (4) SA 380
(SCA) at para 14
[11]
Liquidators
Union and Rhodesia Wholesale Ltd v Brown & Co
1922
AD 549
at 558 to 559
[12]
Ranch
International Pipelines (Transvaal) (Pty) Ltd v LMG Construction
(City) (Pty) Ltd; LMG Construction (City) (Pty) Ltd v Ranch
International Pipelines (Transvaal) (Pty) Ltd and Others
1984 (3) SA 861
(W) at 877 B onwards
[13]
Lanco Engineering CC v Aris Box Manufacturers (Pty) Ltd
1993 (4) SA
378
(D) at384E
[14]
At
384 E
[15]
Country Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure
Development
2015 (1) SA 1
(CC) at para 31
[16]
Masstores (Pty) Ltd v Pick N Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd 2017 (1) SA 613
(CC)
[17]
At
para 37
sino noindex
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