Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 971South Africa
Majorcure Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Others v CKN Medical (Pty) Ltd and Another (35422/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 971 (7 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 December 2022
Headnotes
that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Majorcure Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Others v CKN Medical (Pty) Ltd and Another (35422/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 971 (7 December 2022)
Majorcure Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Others v CKN Medical (Pty) Ltd and Another (35422/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 971 (7 December 2022)
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sino date 7 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 35422 / 2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
7/12/2022
In
the matter between: -
MAJORCURE
CORPORATION (PTY) LTD
1st Excipient / 1st Defendant
JACOBUS
FREDERICK MOUTON 2nd
Excipient / 2nd Defendant
REDZONE
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
3rd
Excipient / 3rd Defendant
and
CKN
MEDICAL (PTY) LTD
1st
Respondent / 1st Plaintiff
TRILOKA
NAIDOO
2
nd
Respondent/
2
nd
Plaintiff
JUDGMENT
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
1]
The excipients noted an exception to the
first and second plaintiffs' particulars of claim as amended on the
basis that the particulars
of claim lack averments necessary to
sustain a valid cause of action.
2]
The parties in this matter will be
referred to as they are in the main action for the sake of clarity
i.e plaintiffs and defendants.
The
defendants premised their exception on the following grounds:
i)
That the plaintiffs failed to lay any
legal basis for an order that the third defendant must repay R10
million to the first defendant
and that the first defendant's
resolution be declared void;
ii)
The Plaintiffs' two claims are deemed to
be mutually destructive, inconsistent and cannot be relied upon as a
cause action;
iii)
That the plaintiffs' herein lack
locus
standi
to seek an order declaring
the second defendant a delinquent director and / or to have the
second defendant placed under probation
in terms of Section 162 of
the Companies A t-4008;
iv)
The plaintiffs failed to lay any legal
basis for any order against the third defendant including a costs
order.
# FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
4]
During the 1st
of August 2017, the first plaintiff duly
represented by the second plaintiff entered into a written
subscription and loan agreement
with the first defendant represented
by the second defendant.
5]
The material terms of the parties'
agreement
inter alia
were
the following: -
(i)
The plaintiffs subscribed for 50% of the
shares in the first defendant in the amount-.of R10 million.
(ii)
After the first defendant issued the
shares as subscribed, the first plaintiff funded the company as one
indivisible transaction
subject to a suspensive condition effective
on the signing of the parties' agreement.
The
Subscription Agreement was therefore subject to several suspensive
conditions having to be fulfilled on or before 15 August
2017.
6]
The suspensive conditions among others
were: -
(i)
The assignment of the patent no's /
application to the first plaintiff.
(ii)
That the new memorandum of incorporation
for first defendant dated 31 July 2017- having been signed by the
parties.
(iii)
The provisions of the suspensive
conditions were subject to being fulfilled or waived by 15 August
2017 or a date agreed to by the
parties or else the Subscription
Agreement would fall away and be of no further force or effect unless
the status quo is restored.
7]
As a result of the Subscription
Agreement the first defendant passed a resolution in terms of Section
74 (1) and 60 (1) of
Companies Act 71 of 2008
and such a resolution
is annexure "CP2" attached to the particulars of claim.
Pursuant
to
the Subscription
Agreement
the first plaintiff advanced
the sum of R6 500 000.00
a
n,
d
.
,
-
.
a
further sum of R1 785 558.47 towards the first defendant's monthly
business expenses.
8]
A sum of R192 311.78 was paid by the
first plaintiff in respect of research and development costs
associated with the first defendant
and the Patent to be credited
against its shareholder loan agreement. The plaintiffs caused summons
to be issued against the defendants
as the suspensive conditions were
not fulfilled as agreed.
9]
It is averred by the plaintiffs that the
Patent was not assigned to the first defendant by the 15 August 2017
and the new Memorandum
of Incorporation dated 31 July 2017 had not
been signed by both parties by 15 August 2017. The first plaintiff
pleaded that the
first defendant was obliged to refund the R10
million paid by the first plaintiff and further amounts so advanced
due to the non-fulfilment
of the suspensive conditions by the first
defendant.
10]
The claim against the second defendant
is, in a nutshell, as a director of the first defendant was aware of
the failure to comply
with suspensive conditions in the Subscription
Agreement. That the third defendant is an entity entirely owned by
the first defendant
of which he is the sole director. It is further
alleged that the second defendant is in breach of his statutory
duties
inter alia
Sections
28
to
31
and
Section 76
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
and for
various reasons as stated in the particulars of claim.
11]
(i)
The plaintiffs' claim that the suspensive conditions of Subscription
Agreement
dated the 1 August 2017 between the first plaintiff and the
first defendant was not fulfilled and it is
void
ab initio.
ii)
That the resolution of the first
defendant linked to the Subscription Agreement be declared
void
ab initio
and that the third
defendant be directed to repay the sum of R10 million to the first
defendant.
iii)
That the first defendant is to repay the
sum of R10 million to the first plaintiff.
iv)
That the first defendant to repay the
monies so advanced as aforementioned.
v)
Interest on the sums aforesaid at the
rate of 8.5 % per annum a
tempora
morae.
vi)
That the second defendant be declared to
be personally liable together with the first defendant for the
aforementioned sums to the
plaintiffs with interest.
vii)
That the second defendant be declared a
delinquent director unconditio
lly
and in perpetuity in terms of
Section 162
of
Companies Act 71 of
2008
.
12]
In the alternative prayers 1-6
a)
That the Subscription Agreement between
the parties dated the 1 August 2017 be declared to be valid and
effective.
b)
That the second defendant be directed to
take all steps necessary to assign patent no's / application as
mentioned.
c)
That the second defendant be interdicted
from transferring or utilising of the patent in any way directly or
indirectly pending
its assignments to the first plaintiff.
d)
The second defendant be directed to
re-appoint the second plaintiff as a director of the first defendant.
e)
Costs of suit on attorney and own client
scale against the defendants.
13]
The defendants filed a notice of
intention to defend the action and raised its first exception during
September 2022. The plaintiffs
amended the particulars of claim in
terms of
Rule 28
of the Rules of Court. An exception was further
noted by the defendants to the amended particulars of claim. The
crisp issue to
be determined in this application is whether the
grounds relied upon by the defendants are sufficient to sustain an
exception.
Put differently, whether the plaintiffs' particulars
f
claim
as amended do not disclose cause of action.
### The
Law relating to exceptions
The
Law relating to exceptions
14]
The purpose of the exception procedure
is to avoid the leading of unnecessary evidence and to dispose a case
in whole or part in
an expedition and cost-effective manner.
### Rule
23 of the Uniform Rules of Court
Rule
23 of the Uniform Rules of Court
15]
Where any pleading is vague and
embarrassing or lacks averments which are necessary to sustain an
action or defence, as the case
may be, the opposing party, may within
the period allowed for filing any subsequent pleading, deliver an
exception thereto and
may set it down for hearing in terms of
paragraphs (f) of sub
rule 4/5
of
Rule 6
, provided that where a party
intends or take an exception that a pleading is vague and
embarrassing he shall within the period
allowed as aforesaid by
notice afford his opponent an opportunity of removing the cause of
complaint within 10 days from the date
on which a reply to such a
notice is received or from the date on which such reply is due,
deliver his exception See
Kahn
.V. Stuart
1942 CPD 386
at 392.
### In
Colonial Industries Ltd .V. Provincial Insurance Co Ltd 1920 CPD 627
at 706the
Court held that:
In
Colonial Industries Ltd .V. Provincial Insurance Co Ltd 1920 CPD 627
at 706
the
Court held that:
"...
the form of pleading known as an exception is
a
valuable
part of our system of procedure if legitimately employed, its
principal use is to raise and obtain
a
speedy and economical
decision of questions of law which are apparent on the face of the
pleadings it also serves
as a
means of taking an objection to
pleadings which are not sufficiently detailed or otherwise lack
lucidity and are thus embarrassing"
### Excipients
contentions
Excipients
contentions
[16]
The defendants contended that there is
no legal basis that the third defendant be held liable to repay
the sum of R10 million
to the first defendant. It is alleged that the
plaintiffs failed to aver in their particulars of claim that the
third defendant
is also a party to the Subscription Agreement entered
into between the first plaintiff and first defendant.
[17]
The defendants submitted that there is
no legal obligation created by the Subscription Agreement as the
plaintiffs omitted to allege
that the third defendant is obligated in
terms of the said agreement between the parties. It is argued by the
defendants that the
alleged suspensive conditions to the Subscription
Agreement which it is alleged were not fulfilled. The third defendant
had no
role to play thereto and as such no legal obligation is
created between the plaintiffs and the third defendant.
[18]
According
to the defendants the view of the plaintiffs that consequent to the
non-fulfilment of the suspensive conditions of the
said Agreement
between the first plaintiff and the first defendant, the resolution
passed by the first defendant cannot be regarded
as void thus
imposing a liability on the third defendant to repay R10 million to
the first defendant.
19]
The contention of the defendants is that
the R10 million dividend will only be paid when the first plaintiff
takes up 100 ordinary
shares issued and that the plaintiffs failed to
plead that they became the shareholders of the first defendant.
20]
In terms of the principle of privity of
contract there can be no claim against the third defendant as the
third defendant is not
a party to the Subscription Agreement more so,
the plaintiffs in the defendants' opinion did not plead any material
facts giving
rise to any legal duty entitling them to any order
against the third defendant.
21]
The plaintiffs' omission to allege the
legal basis that they advanced R10 million to any of the defendants
that the resolution is
void and that the plaintiffs are either
shareholders and / or directors, the view of the defendants is that
the particulars of
claim lacks the necessary averments to sustain any
cause of action against the third defendant.
22]
In response, the plaintiffs argue that
after the defendants raised an exception, the plaintiffs amended its
particulars of claim
which cured the complaints raised in the first
and fourth grounds of the exception.
23]
The plaintiffs conceded that indeed in
its initial resolution annexed "CP2", it pleaded that
such,-a resolution was that
of the third defendant instead of the
resolution of the first defendant. The plaintiffs accordingly
substituted the said resolution
in its amendment of its particulars
of claim and attached the correct resolution.
24]
It is disputed by the plaintiffs that
there is no legal basis to the relief seeking the third defendant to
repay the R10 million
to the first defendant and as to why the
resolution of the first defendant should be declared void.
The
plaintiffs' contention is that its particulars of claim clearly
stipulated the reasons why the third defendant is liable to
effect
payment in the sum of R10 million to the first defendant as well as
to why the first defendant's resolution is
void ab initio.
The
plaintiffs in any event stated that the amended particulars of claim
explicitly set out the legal basis for an order that the
third
defendant is liable for repayment of the R10 million debt and that
the said resolution should be declared void.
25]
According to the plaintiffs, the amended
particulars
of
claim clearly
indicated
that
the
first
defendant
is
inextricably
bound
to
the
Subscription
Agreement as the plaintiffs pleaded in
its amended
particulars
of claim that the first defendant was authorised to declare the
dividend payable to the third
defendant
once
the-first
plaintiff
took up the shares referred to in the parties' agreement.
The said amendment
further
contained
the averment
that the first defendant's resolution is
bound to the parties Subscription Agreement and the resolution were
simultaneously concluded
is enough proof that they are inextricably
linked according to the plaintiffs' submission.
26]
It is, in my view, apposite that the
amendment effected by the plaintiffs in its particulars of claim
should be revisited. It is
not disputed that indeed the amendment in
terms of
Rule 28
was effected by the plaintiffs in its particulars of
claim. The initial incorrect Annexure "CP2" (resolution)
was substituted
by the corrected resolution which read inter alia as
follows:
-
In
paragraphs 14.1.1 and 14.2 the plaintiffs indicated that the sum of
R10 million was paid to the third defendant. The underlying
amended
paragraph replaced paragraph 21 of the plaintiffs' particulars of
claim by inserting the following paragraph:
"by
virtue of the failure of the suspensive condition and I or the
failure of Majorcure to satisfy the solvency and liquidity
test the
resolution is also voided, as
a
consequence of which the third
defendant must repay the dividend of R10 million to Majorcure, which
dividend had already been paid
to the third defendant by Majorcure".
27]
It is worth noting that the defendants
noted its exception earlier on before the amended particulars of
claim were effected. As
to why even after the plaintiffs' particulars
of claim were amended addressing the issues raised specifically to
the first and
fourth grounds of exception (the fourth ground of
exception to be dealt with at a later stage of this judgment) the
defendants
persisted essentially on the same grounds. As aforesaid,
my view is that the complaints raised were attended to in the notice
of
amendment. I am tempted to ask whether the conduct of the
defendants insisting on its ear.tie,- contention of its grounds of
exception
does not invite the question whether or not the court
processes are abused.
28]
In my view, considering the facts and
circumstances of this matter, I am not persuaded that the particulars
of claim do not raise
a cause of action in the first ground of the
defendants' exception. Attaching due interpretation to the rules in
this matter, I
am inclined to hold that the Subscription Agreement
and the first defendant's resolution are interlinked. See
Cash
Converters Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd .V. Rosebud Western Province
Franchise
(Pty)
Ltd
(2002) JOL 9844
(A).
That
the plaintiffs only averred that the defendants are orffy indebted to
them in the sum of R8.4 million cannot be sustained,
the amendment
speaks volumes about the indebtedness in the sum of R10 million by
the defendants as aforesaid.
29]
The second ground of exception is
basically premised on the two claims, one in the alternative namely
that the suspensive conditions
were not met and the other is that in
the alternative the plaintiffs pleaded that the same suspensive
conditions deemed unfulfilled
should be deemed to be fictionally
fulfilled. The defendants' arguments are that the two claims are
mutually destructive, inconsistent
and cannot therefore be regarded
as disclosing a cause of action. The plaintiffs' argument is that the
failure by the defendants
to fulfil the suspensive conditions have
been deemed to constitute cause of action in its particulars of
claim.
30]
In the alternative claim, the plaintiffs
maintain the same cause of action aforementioned but its argument is
that the second defendant
was obliged to fulfil those suspensive
conditions but failed to do so. The plaintiffs submitted that the
additional tacit terms
are not inconsistent with the former
alternative cause of action as it is allowed to plead in the
alternative. This court was referred
to a court decision of
Heydenrych .V. Colonial Mutual
Life Assurance Society,Ltd 1920 DPD67 at 70-1
where the learned judge expressed
himself as follows on the issue of alternative pleading: -
"A
plaintiff may, of course, insert in its declaration an alternative
claim which it will take effect in the event of his proving
all the
facts alleged, but only some of them, or he may allege additional or
alternative facts which are not inconsistent with
one another and on
which he found an alternative claim. But he cannot allege
inconsistent facts or facts which are mutually contradictory
at any
rate not if he thereby prejudices or embarrasses the defendant"
31]
I will first concentrate and deal with
the substantive issues on the main grounds of exception and if
necessary, at a later stage
ventilate on the alternative cause of
action. I hold the view that there is no doubt if regard is to be had
to the non-fulfilment
of the suspensive conditions, the plaintiffs
did plead thereto and managed to disclose its cause of action under
the circumstances.
The exception so raised cannot in my opinion be
supported.
32]
The reliance of the parole rule by the
defendants' Counsel in its heads of argument is not helpful to its
case in my view, as the
parole evidence does not preclude the
insertion of a tacit or implied term as submitted by the plaintiffs.
The disclosure of a
cause of action or defence alleged in the
pleading renders a pleading not excipiable. As the plaintiffs adduced
evidence that discloses
a cause of action, my view is that it has the
effect of making
the
defendants' second ground of exception non-excipiable.
33]
The contention of the defendants in its
third ground of exception is based on the allegation that the
plaintiffs lack the necessary
legal standing to declare the second
defendant a delinquent.
34]
In terms of
Section 162
of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
only the company itself, a shareholder of the company
or the director of the company can declare a director delinquent. As
the
plaintiffs' particulars of claim according to the defendants did
not allege that either of the plaintiffs are shareholders of the
first defendant, have no
locus standi
to declare the second defendant a
delinquent director and as such the plaintiffs' particulars of claim
lack the necessary averments
to sustain a cause of action.
35]
Countering the defendants'
contention above, the plaintiff's
argument is that since the first plaintiff subscribed for shares in
the first defendant and had
advanced shareholders loans to the first
defendant and subsequently tenders return of shares to the first
defendant in the alternative
cause of action raised, in the event the
alternative cause of action that the suspensive conditions and the
fictional cause are
upheld, then the first plaintiff remained a
shareholder. The plaintiffs contended that the above averments would
need evidence
in order for a determination
to be made.
36]
Regarding the issue of the director, the
second plaintiff alleges that it was unlawfully removed by the second
defendant. This issue
cannot be ventilated in this application as it
requires the leading of evidence to can fully and properly make a
determination
to the alleged averment. In a nutshell, the ground for
the third ground for the exception needs a determination by a trial
court
and it is accordingly not sustainable as raised in this
application.
37]
The plaintiff's submission is that since
the third defendant was a party to the behaviour that the plaintiffs
sought to be declared
unlawful in the action proceedings, a costs
order can be awarded against the third defendant.
In
the event the plaintiffs succeeding in the relief sought against the
third defendant the court in exercising its discretion may
grant
costs against the third defendant.
38]
It is alleged that the plaintiffs'
particulars of claim failed to lay any legal basis for any order
warranting costs against the
third defendant. Accordingly, the
defendants allege that the particulars of claim omitted to disclose a
cause of action against
the third defendant and it should be
expiciable. The award of costs unless expressly otherwise enacted is
in the discretion of
court. The facts of each case are to be
considered by the court when exercising its discretion and has to be
fair and just to all
the parties. See
Ferreira
.V
.
Levin
NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996 (2) SA 621
(cc) at 624 B-B [par 31]
.
39]
Careful reading of the plaintiffs'
particulars of claim reveal that it is averred as to how the third
defendant is linked
and the plaintiffs sought an order that the third
defendant be held liable for the repayment of the R10 million. I find
that the
plaintiff disclosed a cause of action against the third
defendant. Whether the costs are to be awarded against the third
defendant
is for the court to make a determination. An issue of costs
will be considered after the consideration of all the facts herein.
40]
My view is that the plaintiffs laid
basis for consideration on the issue costs when the court is called
upon to exercise its discretion.
The defendants basically premised
its exception on the notion that the particulars of claim lack
necessary averments to sustain
a cause of action for the relief the
plaintiffs seek. The court
in
McKenzie .V. Farmers Cooperative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23
defined cause of action as:
"....
every fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove,
if traversed, in order to support its right to judgment of the
court.
It does not compromise every piece of evidence which is necessary to
prove each fact, which is necessary to be proved."'
The
plaintiffs' particulars of claim must therefore set out every
material fact which will be necessary to be proved for the relief
sought in its action.
In
McKevely .V. Cowan NO 1980 (4) SA (z) at 526
the
court stated that: -
"It
is
a
first
principle In
dealing
with
matters
of
exceptions
that,
if
evidence can be led which can
disclose
a
cause
of action alleged in the pleadings, that particular pleading is not
excipiable on the basis that no possible evidence led
on the pleading
can disclose
a
cause
of action."
41]
The onus is upon the defendants to
demonstrate that the particulars of claim of the plaintiffs are
indeed excipiable. The defendants
must establish that the pleading is
excipiable on every interpretation that can reasonably be attached to
it. See
Southernpoort Developments
(Pty) Ltd .V. Transnet Ltd
2003 (5) SA 665
(W)
.
42]
I find that the assertions and averments
made by the defendants that there is no legal basis established in
the plaintiffs' particulars
of claim to sustain a cause of action for
the relief sought lack merit and cannot.be sustained in all the
exceptions noted. At
best, the grounds for the said exceptions are
technical in nature. In
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking .V
.
Advertising
Standards Authority SA
2006 (1) SA 461
SCA at 465 H
it was held that an exception should
be dealt with sensibly and not in an over technical
nature.
43]
The complaints raid by the defendants in
its first and fourth exceptions were addressed in the amendment
effected. As aforesaid
the particulars of claim disclosed a cause of
action and the trial court is best suited to ventilate the disputes
on the evidence
to be led. In deciding an exception the court must
assume the correctness of the factual averments made in the relevant
pleading
unless they are palpably untrue or so improbable that they
cannot be accepted.
44]
There are plausible reasons in law and
fact not to assume and doubt thecorrectness
of the averments made in the plaintiffs' particulars of claim regard
having had to the circumstances
of
this matter. The defendants did not succeed in establishing that the
particulars of claim in this matter lack the necessary averments
to
sustain a cause of action. Accordingly, all the exceptions fall to be
dismissed.
## COSTS
COSTS
45]
The plaintiffs contended that the
exceptions noted by the defendants are from the onset devoid of merit
especially the second and
third exceptions. Regarding the first and
fourth exceptions the plaintiffs submitted that its amendment to the
particulars of claim
disposed the complaints contained therein. The
defendants despite being alerted that its contention that the
particulars of claim
disclosed a cause of action persisted with its
exception application.
46]
The request by the plaintiffs is that
the exceptions be dismissed with a punitive costs order.
The
issue whether to award costs is primarily based on two basic rules
namely: -
a)
That the award of costs is a matter of
judicial discretion by the court;
b)
That a successful party should as a
general rule be awarded costs.
### SeeFripp .V. Gibb n and
Company 1913 AD at 354- 347
See
Fripp .V. Gibb n and
Company 1913 AD at 354- 347
47]
The award of costs on a punitive scale
will not be easily granted by the court unless there are exceptional
and appropriate circumstances
warranting the court to do so. The
court will award costs on a punitive scale in order to penalise a
dishonest, improper, fraudulent,
reprehensible, vexatious, frivolous
malicious, reckless conduct or when a party has committed a grave and
blameworthy conduct in
its conduct of the case. See
Van
Dyk .V. Conradie
1963 (2) SA 413
at 418 E-F
See
also
Nel .V. Waterberg Landbouwers
Kooperatiewe Vereenging
1946 AD 597
48]
The court is inclined to take into
account the conduct of the respective litigants when the aspect of
costs are considered. In
Re
Alluvial Creek Ltd
1929 CPD 532
at 535
the court stated the following: -
''An
order is asked for that he pay the cost between attorney and client.
Now sometimes such an order is given because of something
in the
conduct of a party which the court considers should be punished,
malice, misleading the court and things like that, but
I think the
order may also be granted without any reflection upon the party where
the proceedings are vexatious, and by
vexatious I mean where they have the
effect of being vexatious, although the intent may not have been that
they should the vexatious.
There are people who enter into litigation
with the most upright purpose and
a
most firm belief in the justice of
the cause, and yet his proceedings may be regarded as vexatious when
they put the other side
to unnecessary trouble and expense which the
other side ought not to bear."
49]
The purpose of an award of costs to a
successful litigant is to indemnify him / her for the expense he /
she has been unnecessarily
put through.
After
considering all the facts and issues raised in this application a
punitive costs order is not warranted under the circumstances.
I
find that the plaintiff's deserve to be awarded costs in the ordinary
cause of events.
## ORDER
ORDER
50]
I therefore make the following order: -
a)
The exceptions application is hereby
dismissed;
b)
The defendants to pay all the costs of
the application.
##
##
## S.S.MADIBA
S.S.MADIBA
## ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
## GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE 1st & 2nd RESPONDENTS/PLAINTIFFS: ADV.
Y ALLI
INSTRUCTED
BY:
HAJIBEY-BHYAT
INC
FOR
THE 1st, 2nd & 3rd
EXCIPIENT/DEFENDANTS:
ADV.
N FOURIE
INSTRUCTED
BY: BARNARD
INC ATTORNEYS
HEARD
ON: 14
FEBRUARY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 07 DECEMBER 2022
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