Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1137South Africa
Steinhoff International Holdings N V and Others v Grobler and Other (042753-2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1137 (6 September 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Steinhoff International Holdings N V and Others v Grobler and Other (042753-2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1137 (6 September 2023)
Steinhoff International Holdings N V and Others v Grobler and Other (042753-2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1137 (6 September 2023)
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sino date 6 September 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 042753-2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
6 SEPTEMBER 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
STEINHOFF
INTERNATIONAL HOLDNGS N V
First Applicant
STEINHOFF
RSA HOLDCO LTD
Second
Applicant
STEINHOFF
TOPCO BV
Third Applicant
and
STEPHANUS
JOHANNES GROBLER
First
Respondent
STENHOFF
INTERNATIONAL HOLDINGS
(PTY)
LTD
Second
Respondent
STEINHOFF
AFRICA HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
STEENBOK
NEWCO 10 SARL
Fourth
Respondent
IBEX
RETAIL INVESTMENTS LTD
Fifth
Respondent
ORDER
1.
The plaintiffs
are granted leave to amend their particulars of claim in accordance
with their notice in terms of Rule 28(1) dated
24 July 2023.
2.
The amendment
must be effected within five days from date of this order.
3.
The plaintiffs
remaining in the action after the amendment are ordered to pay the
costs occasioned by the amendment, including the
costs of opposition
thereto, such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
4.
The
defendant’s application in terms of Rule 47(3) is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
5.
The plaintiffs
remaining in the action are ordered to make the documents requested
by the defendant in terms of his notice delivered
in terms of Rules
35(12) and (14) available for inspection and copying by the
defendant’s legal team, within five days from
the date upon
which the amendment referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 had been
affected.
6.
The plaintiffs
remaining in the action are ordered to pay the costs of the
application to compel, such costs to include the costs
of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The issues in
this matter are three interrelated interlocutory applications in
ongoing litigation in the well-publicized “Steinhoff
–
saga”. The main issue is an action for the recovery of
remuneration, including bonuses and share incentives
paid to an
erstwhile senior executive of the Steinhoff Group, Mr S. J. Grobler,
who has been cited as the defendant in the action.
The total of
the amount sought to be recovered is in excess of R270 million.
[2]
The three
interlocutory applications are: an opposed application for leave to
amend the plaintiffs’ particulars of claim,
an application for
the furnishing of security for that application and an application to
compel the discovery of certain documents,
launched in terms of Rules
35(12) and (14).
Background
[3]
Mr Grobler is
alleged to have been inter alia employed as a senior executive and
director of Steinhoff International Holdings (Pty)
Ltd (SIHPL)
(previously a listed company known as Steinhoff International
Holdings Ltd (SIHL)), a senior executive and member of
the governance
and sustainability committee of Steinhoff International Holdings N.
V. (SIHNV) (a company incorporated and registered
in the
Netherlands), the company secretary of SIHPL from 6 December 1999 to
23 September 2011, the group treasurer of the Steinhoff
Group of
companies, the supervisory director and at some stage the managing
director of Steinhoff Europe AG (SEAG) (a company incorporated
in
Austria).
[4]
During the
course of his employment in the aforesaid various capacities from
time to time, Mr Grobler had been paid base salaries,
performance
bonuses, strategic and project bonuses, relocation bonuses and been
granted participation in share incentive schemes
(the remuneration).
[5]
The
remuneration of Mr Grobler had, despite his differing capacities of
employment, been paid to him by Steinhoff Africa Holdings
(Pty) Ltd
(SAHPL), Steinhoff Europe Group Services GmbH (SEGS), being a company
incorporated in Germany and SEAG.
[6]
The total of
the remuneration paid to Mr Grobler by these companies have been
pleaded to be:
·
SAHPL R
238 176 671.00
·
SEGS
Euro 1 370 000.00
·
SEAG
Euro 315 000.00
[7]
The plaintiffs
allege that the remuneration paid to Grobler, in particular the
approvals and authorisations pertaining to bonuses
and share
incentives, were made in the
bona
fide
but
mistaken belief that the financial statements and information
available to SIHPL and SIHNV at the time and the documentation
supporting those financial statements, accurately reflected the true
financial positions and that the profitability and performance
of the
Steinhoff Group had been accurately reflected.
[8]
The plaintiffs
further pleaded that the financial position and profitability
referred to above had not been truthfully and accurately
reflected as
a result of, inter alia, fictitious or irregular transactions which
artificially enhanced the financial position and/or
profitability,
fictitious or irregular income purportedly created in the Steinhoff
Group of entities as well as various “accounting
irregularities”. It is not necessary for purpose of this
judgment to detail all these instances.
[9]
The plaintiffs
further pleaded that, had SIHPL and SIHNV been aware of the true
factual position, they would not have approved and
authorised the
payment of remuneration to Mr Grobler. Consequently, so the
Particulars of Claim aver, SAHPL, SEGS and SEAG
had paid over the
remuneration detailed above to Mr Grobler in the
bona
fide
but
mistaken belief that those payments had been lawfully and properly
due to him.
[10]
The
Particulars of Claim then proceed to plead that SAHPL, SEGS and SEAG
were in these premises impoverished by the payments and
Mr Grobler
was unjustifiably enriched thereby.
[11]
The claims of
SEGS and SEAG had in terms of certain mergers and business transfer
agreements been ceded and transferred to Steenbok
Newco 10 SARL
(Steenbok) (a company registered in the Grant Duchy of Luxembourg)
and Ibex Retail Investments Ltd (Ibex) (a company
formerly known as
Steenbok Newco 6A Ltd, registered in Jersey) respectively.
[12]
The actual
claimants in the action are therefore SAHPL, Steenbok and Ibex.
They are the third, fourth and fifth plaintiffs.
SIHPL features
as the former holding company of all the entities in the Steinhoff
Group as the first plaintiff. Since the
delisting of SIHPL from
the South African Stock Exchange, SIHNV instead became the ultimate
holding company and it featured in
that capacity in the Particulars
of Claim as the second plaintiff.
The
proposed amendment
[13]
Action has
been instituted in May 2023 and although a notice to defend has been
delivered, Mr Grobler still has to deliver his plea,
delivery of
which has been delayed by, inter alia, a request by him in terms of
Rules 35(12) and (14) for the furnishing of certain
documents.
[14]
The plaintiffs
allege that certain relevant occurrences took place after the
institution of the action. These are the following:
on 29 June
2023 SIHNV transferred all its assets and liabilities, which include
the rights and claims asserted in the action, to
Steinhoff Topco BV
(Topco), a company incorporated in the Netherlands. On the same
day, however, Topco transferred all its
assets, including the claims
previously asserted by SIHNV, to Steinhoff RSA Holdco Ltd (Steinhoff
Holdco), a company incorporated
under the laws of England and Wales.
Steinhoff Holdco is referred to in the papers as Steinhoff RSA but,
in order to avoid
the impression that it is a South African company,
I prefer the reference Steinhoff Holdco. This also accords with
the factual
position that Steinhoff Holdco is now the replacement
holding company of those companies in the Steinhoff Group which
feature in
this litigation, in the stead of SIHNV.
[15]
Pursuant to
the above and, in order to bring the plaintiffs’ pleadings in
line with the factual situation, they proposed to
amend their
particulars of claim to delete the name of SIHNV as second plaintiff
and to replace it with the name of Steinhoff Holdco
and to plead the
facts referred to in par [14] above and to annex the relevant
agreements reflecting the transfers of assets and
liabilities
(referred to as the Dutch business transfer agreement involving Topco
(the Dutch BTA)) and the English business transfer
agreement
involving Steinhoff Holdco (the English BTA)).
[16]
Mr Grobler
objected to the amendment, necessitating the first interlocutory
application, being one for leave to amend. Although
nothing
turns on it, the notice of intention to amend had been delivered by
the plaintiffs referred to in paragraph 12 above while
the actual
application for leave to amend was launched in the name of SIHNV,
Steinhoff Holdco and Steinhoff Topco. I shall
refer to all
these parties jointly as plaintiffs and by their abbreviated names or
acronyms where appropriate.
[17]
The principal
objection to the proposed amendment is the complaint that, should the
amendment be granted, SIHNV would no longer
be a party to the
action. The factual situation is however that SIHNV never
featured as a claimant in the action and was
only cited insofar as it
may have had an interest in the litigation. Once all its
assets, including any “claims”
which it may have asserted
in the action had been transferred to Topco and from there to the new
holding company, Steinhoff Holdco,
it would no longer have any
interest in the litigation.
[18]
Moreover,
the factual position is that a substantial restructuring of the
Steinhoff Group had been taking place since 2022, which
restructuring
was implemented in this year (2023). Details of the
restructuring plan together with all its schedules and
annexures have
been made available on
w[...]
under the “Investor Relations” and “WHOA
Restructuring Plan” tabs and described as “Exhibit 1”.
[19]
The
consequences of the restructuring would result in SIHNV being
liquidated (in respect of certain excluded assets and liabilities
not
transferred to Topco) and, subsequent to a ruling by a Dutch court on
21 June 2023, ceasing to exist in terms of Dutch law
on 29 September
2023 (this cessation is also part of the urgency in the finalization
of the amendment).
[20]
Part of the
objection to the amendment was the argument advanced on behalf of Mr
Grobler that it would deprive him of a counter-claim
against SIHNV.
When the court enquired as to the nature of this counterclaim, it was
informed that it was a “claim”
that Grobler had rendered
services in return for his remuneration and that whoever had paid
him, had therefore not been impoverished
by such payment. The
nature of this purported counter-claim is misconstrued. These
assertions (which can be pleaded
in due course) do not constitute a
claim in the true sense of the word, but a defence to the enrichment
claim. Whether or
not SIHNV remains a party to the litigation
or not, will have no impact on such a defence.
[21]
There were two
further answers to Mr Grobler’s fears. The first was that
if he genuinely believed that he had a real
claim against SIHNV (as
opposed to a defence to an enrichment claim by SAHPL, Steenbok or
Ibex), he could still pursue it by submitting
a claim in SIHNV’s
final liquidation proceedings before it ceases to exist. The
second answer was that Steinhoff Holdco
has assumed all the
obligations of SIHNV which it may have had in this litigation.
Should there be any doubt whether this
had taken place in terms of
the various business transfer agreements, the deponent to the
founding affidavit to the application
for leave to amend, has put it
beyond doubt as follows: “
Steinhoff
RSA [Steinhoff Holdco] has taken assignment and transfer of all
rights, assets, claims, liabilities and obligations that
were held by
SIHNV and thus any claim that Grobler may have sought to assert
against SIHNV, can be asserted against Steinhoff RSA
[Steinhoff
Holdco]. Grobler’s rights to assert and prosecute a
counter-claim are unchanged
”.
[22]
During the
course of argument it became apparent that the second objection to
the amendment was Mr Grobler’s greater concern.
It
related to the availability of documentation belonging to SIHNV and
which also forms part of the subject-matter of Mr Grobler’s
notice in terms of Rules 35(12) and (14) as well as his application
to compel discovery of the documents called for in that notice.
[23]
Again, this
concern or fear of prejudice has, to my mind, been conclusively
addressed by the plaintiffs. In the words of the
current Chief
Compliance and Risk Officer of the Steinhoff Group, Mr Louis Strydom,
in dealing with the objection that Mr Grobler
“…
in
order to establish certain assertions/defences, would need means and
remedies to procure evidence and particulars … that
could be
exercised against SIHNV and, if Steinhoff RSA [Steinhoff Holdco]
becomes a plaintiff in the stead of SIHNV, such means
and remedies
will be rendered useless as Steinhoff RSA [Steinhoff Holdco] will not
have the required records, documents control
…
”
denied this by stating that “…
any
and all records, documents and information and the like, that were
held by SIHNV, are available to and under the control of
Steinhoff
RSA [Steinhoff Holdco] on an unfettered and unconditional basis.
Steinhoff RSA [Steinhoff Holdco], as the party
that is responsible
for inter alia the performance and fulfillment of all discovery
obligations in this matter, means that any
procedural mechanisms that
would previously have been used against SIHNV to procure discovery,
can now be used against Steinhoff
RSA [Steinhoff Holdco].
Grobler’s procedural rights therefore are unchanged
”.
[24]
The
legal principles governing applications for amendment of pleadings
have been summarised many times, but perhaps not as succinctly
as in
Commercial
Union Assurance Co Ltd v Waymark NO
[1]
.
These are the following:
1.
The court has
a discretion whether to grant or refuse an amendment.
2.
An amendment
cannot be granted for the mere asking; some explanation must be
offered therefor.
3.
The applicant
must show that
prima
facie
the
amendment ‘has something deserving of consideration, a triable
issue’.
4.
The modern
tendency lies in favour of an amendment if such ‘facilitates
the proper ventilation of the dispute between the
parties’.
5.
The party
seeking the amendment must not be
mala
fide
.
6.
The amendment
must not ‘cause an injustice to the other side which cannot
compensated by costs’.
7.
The amendment
should not be refused simply to punish the applicant for neglect.
8.
A mere loss of
(the opportunity of gaining) time is no reason, in itself, for
refusing the application.
9.
It the
amendment is not sought timeously, some reason must be given for the
delay.
[25]
When the above
principles are applied to the application for amendment under
consideration, one finds that there is a cogent explanation
for the
amendment – the factual landscape has changed and the
plaintiffs seek leave to have their pleadings accord with the
facts.
The triable issues, namely the claims of the actual claimants already
referred to above, are left intact. Also
no
mala
fides
can
be ascribed to the plaintiffs in seeking the amendment. There
was also no neglect on the part of the plaintiffs.
The
amendment is sought timeously, in fact before Mr Grobler had even
delivered a plea. He therefore has every opportunity
still left
to set out his defence and he need not “adjust” his
position or effect a consequential amendment as is often
the case.
Any possible prejudice appears to have been removed or addressed as I
have already indicated above. I shall
deal with the issue of
costs hereinlater.
[26]
Having
considered all of the above, in the exercise of the court’s
discretion and in order to have the matter progress to
a stage where
the parties can ventilate their disputes, leave to amend should be
granted to the plaintiffs.
The
Rule 35(12) and (14) discovery
[27]
Approximately
a month prior to the delivery of the plaintiffs’ notice of
intention to amend, Mr Grobler had delivered a notice
in terms of
Rules 35(12) and (14). With reference to an extensive list of
paragraphs of the particulars of claim, numerous
documents were
called to be furnished. Notably, with the exception of one
sub-paragraph (par 9.2) none of the paragraphs
that the plaintiffs
now seek to amend, feature in this notice and the amendment of par
9.2 is immaterial and it still retains a
reference to SIHNV.
Non-compliance with this notice, led to an application to compel,
which is the second application this
court has to deal with.
[28]
Apart from the
disputes as to whether Mr Grobler is entitled to all the documents
called for in the notice or whether some of those
called for exceed
the bounds of Rules 35(12) and (14) and amount to an attempt at
obtaining an early general discovery, there is
no real reason why no
response had yet been delivered. While repeatedly
confirming on oath in the Steinhoff Group’s
answering affidavit
to the application to compel, that “
there
was never an intention not to respond to the Rule35 notice
”
and that the plaintiffs “…
do
not deny their obligation to respond to the Rule 35 notice
”,
in two months since the delivery of the notice, no response has been
delivered.
[29]
The excuse
tendered was that the sifting thought thousands of pages of documents
and considering which of Mr Grobler’s requests
were overbroad
and which were not and preparing redacted versions of those documents
falling under Dutch anti-disclosure provisions,
were
“time-consuming”. This is an unconvincing reply.
One would justifiably have expected of plaintiffs
who have delivered
extensive Particulars of Claim, containing equally elaborately
formulated claims, based on specific periods
of employment and the
like, to have had the documentation relevant to those claims (and
possible defences thereto) readily at hand.
[30]
In respect to
this issue and as part of the plaintiffs’ guarantee not to
cause Mr Grobler any procedural prejudice, Adv Swart
SC (who appeared
for the plaintiffs together with advocates Burger and Lengane),
tendered a response to the Rules 35(12) and (14)
notice within 10
days. Upon prompting from the court, he also indicated no
objection, should an order to compel be granted,
that it be granted
against the “new” set of plaintiffs. That would in
any event accord with the undertakings
furnished by Mr Strydom on
behalf of the Steinhoff Group as already referred to above.
[31]
I further find
that such an order to compel would provide additional comfort for Mr
Grobler and serve to remove any procedural prejudice
which he had
feared.
The
application for security for costs
[32]
On 24 August
2023, that is on the Thursday preceding the Tuesday of 29 August
2023, being the day on which the application for amendment
had been
set down for argument, Mr Grobler launched an application in terms of
Rule 47(3) for an order compelling the applicants
in the application
to amend, to furnish security for his costs of that application in
the amount of R750 000.00.
[33]
The basis for
the application was that all three those applicants were peregrini of
South Africa and that the first applicant (SIHNV)
has, on its own
version, “demonstrated a lack solvency”. The
allegation is made that Steinhoff Holdco and Steinhoff
Topco “…
inherited no better position”.
[34]
The allegation
regarding SIHNV appears to have some merit, but it is difficult to
understand Mr Grobler’s concern about an
ability to pay costs
when that soon-to-be dissolved company is to be replaced by Steinhoff
Holdco, a company which, according to
the opposing affidavit read
with the business transfer agreements, has assets exceeding Euro 1,1
million. The Steinhoff Group
Chief Compliance and Risk Officer
indicated that there should be more than sufficient funds to cover
the costs of the application
to amend (including the costs occasioned
by SIHNV and Steinhoff Topco, both of which would no longer feature
as parties in the
main action).
[35]
As things
worked out and, due to the joint hearing of all three interlocutory
applications in the urgent court, the issue of security
for costs
prior
to the hearing of the other two applications, largely became moot.
In light of the view I took in respect of the other two
matters, I do
not believe that Mr Grobler had been prejudiced thereby. Very
little discernable extra costs came into play
by way of the
application for leave to amend, which had not already been incurred
in respect of the hearing and argument of the
other two
applications. As pointed out above, Mr Grobler’s
application for delivery of documents and his concern about
that
aspect was so intertwined with the amendment itself that it is
inconceivable on what basis he would need the protection of
security
of R3/4 million for any marginal extra costs to argue the application
for leave to amend. In fact, the plaintiffs
have gone so far as
to label this application an abuse of court or a delaying and
frustrating mechanism.
[36]
Be
that as it may and apart from the apparent mootness thereof, the
belated application for security or costs faced its own hurdles.
The requirements of the furnishing of security for costs by a
corporate entity is no longer part of our statutory law
[2]
.
A claim for such security against a peregrinus company is also not,
as Mr Grobler appeared to contend, merely for the asking.
[37]
The
relevant legal principles applicable to the furnishing of security
has most recently been summarized as follows
[3]
:
“
Security
for costs is a discretionary remedy that a court may grant to a
defendant who has a reasonable apprehension that the plaintiff
will
not be able to pay the costs of litigation of the plaintiff’s
claim fails. An incola is not, as a matter of course,
entitled
to demand security from a peregrinus claimant. It is at the
discretion of the court to make such an order after
an investigation
of the circumstances and if equity and fairness to both litigants
dictate that such an order be made. There
is no justification
for requiring the court to exercise its discretion in favour of a
peregrinus only sparingly
”. \
[38]
With
reference to
Shepstone
& Wylie and Others v Geyser NO
[4]
,
the court in
Mystic
River
explained that a court should not fetter its own discretion and
should decide each case upon consideration of all the circumstances
either in favour or against granting security.
[39]
In this case,
most of the costs attached to the application for leave to amend,
including notices, affidavits and heads of argument,
have already
been incurred prior to the launching of the application to furnish
security. All that was left, was the argument.
This was,
however, considered together with the argument in the application to
furnish security itself as well as the application
to compel
discovery in term of Rules 35(12) and (14). The latter was, as
inextricably intertwined with the application for
leave to amend
itself. Furthermore, the second applicant, Steinhoff Holdco, as
the holding company of the first plaintiff,
a South African company,
has assets against which execution could be levied in the event of
non-payment of the costs of occasioned
by the amendment.
[40]
In all these
circumstances, I decline, in the exercise of the court’s
discretion, to grant the relief sought at his stage
of the
proceedings in Mr Grobler’s application in terms of Rule 47(3).
Costs
[41]
It
is trite that an order for costs involves the exercise of a
discretion of the court. The general principle is that costs
should follow the success of a proceeding unless there are factors
militating against such an order. The further principle
is that
a party seeking an indulgence should pay all the costs occasioned
thereby, including the costs of such opposition as is
in the
circumstances reasonable and not vexatious or frivolous
[5]
.
[42]
Although
unsuccessful, I do not find Mr Grobler’s opposition to the
proposed amendment so unreasonable as to justify the deprivation
of
costs. The application for the furnishing of security for costs
was, however unnecessary in the circumstances and costs
should follow
its event. In respect of the application to compel discovery,
even though the relief to be granted therein
will now have to be
amended to cater for the plaintiffs’ substitution of parties,
they could (and should) have responded
to the preceeding notice long
ago. The application was already justified prior to the recent
events and costs should follow
its eventual success.
Order
[43]
In the
premises, the following orders are granted:
1.
The plaintiffs
are granted leave to amend their particulars of claim in accordance
with their notice in terms of Rule 28(1) dated
24 July 2023.
2.
The amendment
must be effected within five days from date of this order.
3.
The plaintiffs
remaining in the action after the amendment are ordered to pay the
costs occasioned by the amendment, including the
costs of opposition
thereto, such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
4.
The
defendant’s application in terms of Rule 47(3) is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
5.
The plaintiffs
remaining in the action are ordered to make the documents requested
by the defendant in terms of his notice delivered
in terms of Rules
35(12) and (14) available for inspection and copying by the
defendant’s legal team, within five days from
the date upon
which the amendment referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 had been
affected.
6.
The plaintiffs
remaining in the action are ordered to pay the costs of the
application to compel, such costs to include the costs
of two
counsel.
N
DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 30 August 2023
Judgment
delivered: 6 September 2023
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicants:
Adv Swart SC
together with
Adv S W Burger &
Adv M Lengane
Attorney for the
Applicant:
Werksman Attorneys,
Pretoria
c/o Brazington and
McConnell
Attorneys, Pretoria
For the Second
Respondent:
Adv E J Ferreira SC
together with
Adv P L Uys
Attorney for the
Second Respondent:
Savage Jooste and
Adams, Pretoria
[1]
1995
(2) SA 69 (TKGD).
[2]
Siemens
Telecommunications (Pty) Ltd v Datagenics (Pty) Ltd
2013
(1) SA 65
(GNP) and
Boost
Sports Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African Breweries (Pty) Ltd
2015 (5) SA 38
(SCA)
[3]
In
Mystic
River Investment 45 (Pty) Ltd v Zayeed Paruk Inc
2023 (4) SA 500
(SCA) at par7 (
Mystic
River
).
[4]
[1998] ZASCA 48
;
1998
(3) SA 1036
(SCA);
[1998] 3 All SA 349
(SCA) at 1045C – 1045I
[5]
See
Van Loggerenber
g,
Erasmus Superior Court Practice
,
Second Edition D5-8 and the cases cited in footnote 4.
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[2023] ZAGPPHC 99High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
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