Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 949South Africa
Swallows FC v Wowowo and Another (045818/2022 ; 046387/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 949 (9 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 December 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPPHC 949
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Swallows FC v Wowowo and Another (045818/2022 ; 046387/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 949 (9 December 2022)
Swallows FC v Wowowo and Another (045818/2022 ; 046387/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 949 (9 December 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2022_949.html
sino date 9 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No:
045818/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED
9
DECEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
SWALLOWS
FC
Applicant
and
AUSTIN
KAUNDA WOWOWO
1
ST
Respondent
NATIONAL
SOCCER LEAGUE
2
ND
Respondent
Case
No:
046387/2022
In
the matter between:
ROYAL
FOOTBALL CLUB
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
SOCCER LEAGUE
1
ST
Respondent
KGOSIETSILE
MOLOKWANE
2
ND
Respondent
DITHEKO
MOTOTO
3
RD
Respondent
SIMON
GOPANE
4
TH
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
Introduction
1.
On
8 December 2022, I made orders in the above two matters, attached for
ease of reference. Both matters concern the dispute
resolution
procedures of the National Soccer League (the NSL)
[1]
and the South African Football Association (SAFA)
[2]
.
Both came before me on the urgent roll on 22 November 2022 and I
heard them together on 26 November 2022. I did so
after
affording SAFA an opportunity to participate, which it declined to
do. I now give my reasons for my orders.
[3]
2.
In
the first matter,
[4]
Swallows
Football Club (SFC) applied to interdict the NSL from enforcing an
award of the NSL’s Dispute Resolution Chamber
(DRC) dated 29
September 2022 by deducting amounts from its monthly grant and paying
them to the first respondent, Mr Austin Kaunda
Muwowo, pending
finalization of appeal proceedings before SAFA’s Arbitration
Tribunal. In the second matter,
[5]
Royal AM Football Club (RAMFC) also applies to interdict the NSL’s
enforcement of DRC awards, payable to the second,
third and fourth
respondents, being Mr Kgosietsile Molokwane, Mr Ditheko Mototo and Mr
Simon Gopane. The awards in question
are dated, respectively,
16 March 2022, 1 September 2022 and 24 October 2022. In
respect of Mr Mototo and Mr Gopane,
the RAMF is seeking to prosecute
appeals before the SAFA Arbitration Tribunal. In respect of Mr
Molokwane, that appeal process
has been exhausted and review
proceedings are pending before this Court.
3.
I heard the
matters together in circumstances where I considered it to be in the
interests of justice to determine an issue that
is common to three of
the matters. The issue does not arise in Mr Molokwane’s
matter, which I deal with separately
below. The common issue is
whether the lodgment of an appeal against a decision of a
non-disciplinary nature of the DRC suspends
the decision pending the
determination of the appeal or not. Appeals against these
decisions lie with SAFA’s Arbitration
Tribunal. On the evidence
before me there is understandable uncertainty and confusion about the
import of the applicable rules
on this issue, and, unless certainty
prevails, unnecessary litigation will invariably result. I have
been assisted in this
regard both by submissions from the parties and
from the NSL’s legal counsel, Mr Michael Murphy.
4.
I deal first
with the interpretation of the applicable rules. I conclude
that the lodgment of an appeal does not suspend the
operation of the
decision but that an appellant may request the arbitrator of the
Arbitration Tribunal to make such an order, which
lies in their power
to grant. I then explain the consequences of the interpretation
to the matters before me. Thereafter,
I deal with the position
of Mr Molokwane.
Interpretation
of the NSL and SAFA Rules
5.
The
NSL rules are set out mainly in the National Soccer League Handbook
(the NSL Handbook). The rules deal differently with
disputes of
a disciplinary and a non-disciplinary nature.
[6]
All the matters before me are non-disciplinary in nature
[7]
and Rule 23, titled Dispute Resolution Chamber, applies. The
DRC is described in Rule 23.1 as ‘an independent arbitration
tribunal vested with the authority to adjudicate disputes other than
those of a disciplinary nature or which are status matters
arising
from international transfers.
[8]
Its powers are set out in Rule 23 and include, amongst others,
condoning late referrals and providing urgent or interim relief,
ordering a party to pay damages, compensation, salaries, signing-on
fees and transfer fees, including those relating to an image-right
dispute, sporting sanctions, specific performance, varying or
rescinding awards, issuing declaratory relief and awarding costs.
[9]
Clause 23.4 is titled ‘Awards final and binding’
and provides, in effect, that the DRC’s decisions
are final and
binding although subject to appeal or review before the SAFA
Arbitration Tribunal.
6.
Clause 24,
titled ‘Appeals’ reads as follows:
‘
24.1
Awards of the Dispute Resolution Chamber may be the subject of an
appeal or a review to the SAFA Arbitration Tribunal.
24.2
A copy of any notice of any appeal must be served on the League at
the time of the appellant lodging an appeal with the SAFA
Arbitration
Tribunal in accordance with the applicable SAFA rules.’
7.
Clauses
25 and 28 impose a duty on member clubs, players, coaches and member
club officials to exhaust internal procedures before
approaching a
Court in respect of matters that can be determined or decided in
terms of the League Rules, the NSL Handbook or the
SAFA, FIFA
[10]
or CAF
[11]
Statutes.
8.
Clause 26 is
also titled ‘Appeals’ and reads: ‘
’
26.1
Appeals against decisions of the Judicial Tribunals
[12]
(save where the Dispute Resolution Chamber arbitrates disputes which
will in the event of an appeal be referred directly to the
SAFA
Arbitration Tribunal) will be regulated by the SAFA and FIFA
Regulations.
26.2
The League must be served with a copy of every notice of appeal by
the appellant at the time that the appeal is lodged with
SAFA in
accordance with the SAFA Statutes.
26.3
An appeal against an order of the Disciplinary Committee or the
Dispute Resolution Chamber will not suspend the operation of
that
order pending the finalisation of any appeal or arbitration in
respect of that order.’
9.
Clause 27 is
titled ‘Arbitration’ and provides that disputes or
differences regarding decisions, ruling or awards of
the DRC or the
SAFA Appeals Board are to be referred to arbitration pursuant to and
conducted in accordance with the SAFA Statutes.
There is no
provision equivalent to Clause 26.3 in Clause 27. Rather Clause
27.4 provides that the arbitrator’s decision
is final and
binding. The matters before me are appeals.
10.
The
Court has been provided with a copy of the SAFA Statutes.
[13]
Its judicial bodies are identified under Article 49 titled
‘Independent Committees’ and regulated under Article
53,
titled ‘Judicial Bodies’. Notably, the Arbitration
Tribunal is not mentioned: these bodies deal with
disciplinary
and ethical matters. Arbitration is regulated by Article 58,
titled ‘Arbitration’, which provides,
in relevant part:
’
58.1
SAFA shall establish an Arbitration Tribunal, which shall deal with
all further appeals from the decision of the National Appeals
Committee and the decision of an arbitrator shall be final and
binding.
58.1.1
…. to 58.1.3 ….
58.2
The SAFA NEC shall draw up special regulations regarding the
composition, jurisdiction and procedural rules of this Arbitration
Tribunal.
58.4
Where no specific dispute prevention or resolution procedures are set
in the Statues, Rules and Regulations, or
where any Member or an
affiliate of a Member, or individual prefers to, disputes may be
referred directly to arbitration for resolution.
It is
specifically provided that where Regional Members or its affiliates
or individual opt for arbitration, such arbitration may
be conducted
by a senior lawyer in the Province consented to by the parties.
58.5
Subject to the Constitution of the Republic, and save in
circumstances where there is a need for urgent relief of a sort which
cannot be obtained through the dispute resolution procedure
contemplated by this article, no body or individual falling under the
jurisdiction of SAFA shall approach a Court of Law to decide on a
dispute it has with a body or individual affiliated to SAFA.
58.6
The powers of an arbitrator shall be defined in the disciplinary
code.
11.
The
parties’ representatives informed me and Mr Murphy confirmed
that the SAFA NEC has not drawn up special regulations regarding
the
composition, jurisdiction and procedural rules of the Arbitration
Tribunal as required by Article 58.2.
[14]
12.
The
absence of regulations is not decisive in view of Article 58(6).
The SAFA Disciplinary Code
[15]
identifies SAFA’s judicial bodies as the Disciplinary
Committee, the Appeal Board and the Arbitration Tribunal.
[16]
Arbitration is dealt with in Article 81. Article 81(11)
provides: ‘Notwithstanding anything contained in these
Rules,
the powers of the arbitrator shall be wide and shall be determined by
the arbitrator at his sole discretion.’
13.
Importantly,
Article 81 does not deal with whether the lodgment of any appeal with
the Arbitration Tribunal suspends the effect
of the decision under
appeal. This can be contrasted with the provisions of Article 125
which regulates the effect of appeals that
go to the Appeal Committee
(being disciplinary in nature). Article 125(2), specifically,
states that such an appeal ‘does
not have a suspensive effect
except with regard to orders to pay a sum of money.’
Confusion
and interpretation
14.
Article 125(2)
is the source of confusion in the matters before me. The
applicants submitted that Article 125(2) applies to
appeals before
the Arbitration Tribunal In doing so, they place reliance on a
letter dated 22 June 2022 written by SAFA’s
CEO, Mr Tebogo
Motlanthe to the applicants’ attorney The letter is in
respect of case number 046387/2022 and is in
connection with Mr
Molokwane’s matter specifically: Mr Motlanthe is
responding to a request seeking clarity regarding
the procedure for
suspension of the NSL DRC order in respect of Mr Molokwane. The
letter advises, unequivocally and relying
on Article 125(2) of the
SAFA Disciplinary Code, that the order would be suspended pending the
appeal or arbitration before SAFA
where sounding in money.
15.
Counsel
for the respondents, and Mr Murphy for the NSL, however, submitted
that Article 125(2) is inapplicable to appeals before
the Arbitration
Tribunal and applies only to appeals before the Appeal Committee.
According to Mr Murphy, the only provision
that deals expressly with
the suspension of any order of the DRC in non-disciplinary matters is
found in Article 26.3 of the NSL
Handbook which I repeat for
convenience. It provides: ‘An appeal against an
order of the Disciplinary Committee
or the Dispute Resolution Chamber
will not suspend the operation of that order pending the finalisation
of any appeal or arbitration
in respect of that order.’
Mr Murphy contended, however, that this does not mean that an
aggrieved party need come
to court for relief pending the outcome of
an appeal before the Arbitration Tribunal as the arbitrator has the
power to suspend
an order subject to the exercise of a discretion.
This power, it is said, derives from Article 81(11).
[17]
That approach, Mr Murphy says, is consistent with the broader scheme
of the rules applicable to football at its different
levels and
accords with the principles underpinning dispute resolution which,
for obvious reasons germane to the world of football,
require
expeditious internal resolution of disputes.
16.
I am not
apprised of the reasons why SAFA has not complied with the duty to
make regulations regarding the composition, jurisdiction
and
procedural rules of the Arbitration Tribunal as required by Article
58.2. On the face of it, this is unfortunate.
Such
regulations could, if properly attended to, provide certainty and
limit the need for litigation of the sort before me, which
is the
clear intention of the instruments governing both SAFA and the NSL.
It is also unfortunate that there is an apparent
absence of consensus
between the NSL and SAFA regarding the effect of the lodgment of an
appeal with the SAFA Arbitration Tribunal
against a decision of the
NSL’s DRC, and in turn, communications with affected parties
are not consistent. In
this regard, there is
correspondence on record (also in case number 046387/2022) dated 9
September 2022 written by Mr Murphy to
the applicants’
attorneys, being the same in all matters. The letter refers to
the history of the matter concerning
Mr Molokwane and in concluding,
refers to remedies available to aggrieved parties to approach a court
or tribunal of competent
jurisdiction to enforce or suspend the
award. At that stage Mr Molokwane had exhausted the process
before the SAFA Tribunal
and had instituted review proceedings in
this Court. There is also an e-mail dated 25 October 2022 from
Mr Murphy which,
similarly, assumes that orders will be implemented
absent an order from a court or tribunal seized with the matter.
That email references all matters in the RAMFC case. I can only
assume that Mr Murphy was not apprised of the letter or advices
from
Mr Motlanthe as, had he been, he would surely have both engaged SAFA
and in turn explained more clearly the processes as he
understood
them.
17.
In
my view, the interpretation that Mr Motlanthe yields a better result
than the one given by Mr Murphy. Nevertheless, I have concluded
that
the interpretation Mr Murphy gives to the rules is the legally
correct one. Put simply, when dealing with appeals from
the DRC
to the Arbitration Tribunal, the default position is as expressly
stated in the NSL Handbook that the lodgment of an appeal
does not
suspend its operation (Article 26.3), and on its own terms, Article
125(2) of the Disciplinary Code does not apply.
However, an
aggrieved party may request the arbitrator to suspend its operation
under Article 81(11) of the SAFA Disciplinary Code
read with Article
58(6) of the SAFA Statute. The arbitrator’s powers are
wide and, to ensure fairness and justice,
must extend to a request to
suspend an order of the DRC while an appeal before the Arbitration
Tribunal is pending.
[18]
I
have reached this conclusion applying the principles relating to the
interpretation of documents set out in
recent
decisions of the Supreme Court of Appeal and Constitutional Court and
having regard simultaneously to text, context and purpose.
[19]
The interpretation sits comfortably with the express language
and logic of the regulatory scheme as set out above.
Moreover,
it is clear from the broader scheme of the statutes and codes that,
without ousting courts’ jurisdiction,
the expeditious and cost
effective internal resolution of disputes is a primary concern of
those who are bound by them. It
is also a legitimate concern
worthy of protection given the sporting environment and the interests
of respective stakeholders,
in these cases, clubs, coaches and
players.
[20]
And if the
SAFA Arbitration did not have the power to suspend orders pending
appeals, it would create an untenable situation
requiring parties
aggrieved by a decision of the DRC regularly to approach courts
urgently, something the statutes and codes are
astute to avoid.
The
implications of the interpretation
18.
As indicated
above, there are three separate matters in case no 046387/2022.
One is that of Mr Molokwane, dealt with below.
In Mr Mototo’s
matter (RAMFC v Mr Mototo), the DRC made its decision on 1 September
2022. The orders entail payment
of various amounts including
R840 000 damages and other amounts in salary, severance, leave
pay and compensation. The
RAMFC’s appeal to the SAFA
Arbitration Tribunal is apparently sent on 26 September 2022. In Mr
Gopane’s matter (RAMFC
v Mr Gopane), the DRC made its decision
on 24 October 2022 and the appeal to the SAFA Arbitration Tribunal is
apparently sent on
28 October 2022.
19.
In case no
025818 (Swallows FC v Mr Muwowo), the DRC made its decision on 29
September 2022. The order entails a determination
that Swallows
FC is indebted to Mr Muwowo in a net amount of R227 977.59 being
a shortfall in salary payments for November
and December 2021 and
March 2022 and a net amount of R648 940.40 being outstanding
salaries for January, February, April,
May and June 2022. In
the event that Swallows FC fails to pay these amounts, the NSL is
directed to deduct amounts from its
monthly grant. The
appeal is dated 19 October 2022.
20.
As appears
from the above, it is only the decision in Mr Gopane’s matter
that was of genuinely recent origin. However,
the applicant’s
difficulties arose due to uncertainty created by the correspondence I
refer to above from, respectively,
SAFA’s Mr Motlanthe and the
NSL’s Mr Murphy. The e-mail that ultimately generated the
litigation is dated 25
October 2022. As I indicated during the
hearing, and save perhaps in respect of Mr Gopane’s matter, I
entertained concerns
about self-created urgency in these matters.
However, I ultimately took the view that it was in the interests of
justice
to deal with the matters because of the uncertainty that
prevailed. Assuming SAFA’s Arbitration Tribunal deals
swiftly
with the matters, which, Mr Murphy assured me, it routinely
does, all the appeals affected by my orders ought to be resolved in
the very near future.
21.
The orders I
made entail a brief suspension of the DRC orders that are subject to
an appeal process solely to enable the applicant
to request a
suspension of the decisions pending the outcome of the appeals before
the SAFA Arbitration Tribunal. If the
applicants do not make
these requests by 10 am on Monday 12 December 2022, then the
suspension order lapses. If the applicant
does make the
request, then the suspension order operates until the arbitrator
takes a decision.
22.
These orders
are accordingly, in nature, temporary interdicts, to which I am
satisfied the applicant is entitled on the common cause
facts.
The applicant is entitled to request a suspension. The
confusion that prevailed is not of its own making.
It will be
deprived of that right if not afforded an opportunity to make the
request and have it timeously considered. Ultimately
justice
will be best served of course, if the arbitrator acts swiftly to
determine the appeals themselves.
23.
This
does not mean that the defences that the respondents have raised are
of no importance. Indeed, they could be decisive.
But
they can appropriately be raised in response to any request made to
the arbitrator to suspend the operation of the order, and
if that
request is granted in the appeal itself. As for costs, I
concluded that each party should carry their own costs as
I am unable
to ascribe ultimate blame or responsibility for the state of affairs
to any of the cited parties.
Mr
Molokwane
24.
The position
in respect of the dispute between RAMFC and Mr Molokwane stands on a
different footing. As indicated above, in
this matter, the
appeal process before the SAFA Arbitration Tribunal is complete, with
a decision given on 6 August 2022.
A review application is
pending before this Court under case number 23556/2022 The review
application was instituted as far back
as 23 August 2022. It is
inexplicable why the applicant waited until now to seek any urgent
relief. The contention
made that there are factual and
legal issues that overlap with the other matters cannot justify the
delay, not least because these
are not matters that were being
prosecuted together before the respective dispute resolution bodies
and the affected respondents
assert distinct rights. As the
order reflects, I accordingly declined to consider Mr Molokwane’s
application on an
urgent basis, and I made a resultant order for the
costs of the urgent application.
S
COWEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected 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
hand-down is deemed to be 9 December 2022.
HEARD
ON 25
NOVEMBER 2022
ORDERS
GRANTED ON 8
DECEMBER 2022
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 9 DECEMBER 2022
APPEARANCES
Case No:
045818/2022
On
behalf of the Applicant: Adv.
LE Thobejane
Instructed
by: Botha
Massyn & Thobejane
On
behalf of the Respondents: Adv
Kiletjie Mokoatlo
Instructed
by: Razano
Attorneys
APPEARANCES:
Case No:
046387/2022
On
behalf of the Applicant: Adv.
LE Thobejane
Instructed
by: Botha
Massyn & Thobejane
On
behalf of the Respondents: Adv
B Braun
Instructed
by: Brink
De Beer, Potgieter Attorneys
[1]
An
association of professional football clubs which promotes,
administers, controls, governs and regulates professional football
in South Africa and is a special member of SAFA.
[2]
Being
the national association governing football in South Africa to which
the NSL is affiliated.
[3]
I
was unable to complete the judgments at the time I delivered the
orders due to unavailability of power supply at the time.
[4]
Case
number 045818/2022.
[5]
Case
number 046387/2022
[6]
Disputes
of a disciplinary nature are dealt with in terms of Rule 22.
[7]
The
types of disputes that fall within the jurisdiction of this body are
set out in Clause 23.2.1 which provides that the DRC
has
jurisdiction over, inter alia, determination of the following issues
or disputes: - disputes between member clubs, employer-related
disputes between a member club and a player, employment-related
disputes between a member club, a coach and any other employee
who
is part of the member club’s technical team, employment
related disputes between a member club official and a member
club
and training and development compensation and / or solidarity
payment disputes.
[8]
The
rules explain that status matters arising from international
transfers fall within the competence and jurisdiction of the
FIFA
Players Status Committee.
[9]
Rule
23.2.3
[10]
The
Fédération Internationale de Football Association,
being the international governing body of football.
[11]
The
Confederation Africaine de Football, being the continental
federation regulating football on the African continent
[12]
Defined
in the NSL Handbook to mean the Disciplinary Committee and the
Dispute Resolution Chamber.
[13]
Last
amended by the SAFA Ordinary Congress held on 26 March 2022 at the
Sandton Convention Centre.
[14]
I
was informed that there is a collective bargaining agreement in
place between the NSL and the South African Football Players
Union,
which deals, inter alia, with procedures applicable to the DRC.
After hearing the parties, it was agreed that Mr
Murphy may supply
the Court with a copy on a confidential basis with the sole purpose
of enabling the Court to confirm that its
provisions do not, as Mr
Murphy understood, deal with the issue before the Court. I am
satisfied that they do not resolve
the matter.
[15]
The
version supplied to the Court is dated 18 August 2012
[16]
Article
73.
[17]
See
paragraph 12 above.
## [18]I
am satisfied that this approach accords with the decision inPolokwane
City Football Club v South African Football Association and Others;
TS Sporting Football Club v South African Football
Association and
Others [2021] ZAGPJHC 64 at para 31.
[18]
I
am satisfied that this approach accords with the decision in
Polokwane
City Football Club v South African Football Association and Others;
TS Sporting Football Club v South African Football
Association and
Others [2021] ZAGPJHC 64 at para 31.
## [19]Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality [2012] ZASCA
13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)at
para 18 cited with approval by the Constitutional Court inAirports
Company South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Limited and
Others[2018]
ZACC 33at
para 29.
See tooBothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2013] ZASCA 176; [2014] 1 All SA 517 (SCA); 2014
(2) SA 494 (SCA).University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and another
[2021] ZACC 13; 2021(8) BCLR 807 (CC); 2021(6) SA
1 (CC); Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and others [2021] ZASCA 99; [2021]
3 All SA 647 (SCA);
2022(1) SA 100 (SCA).
[19]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality [2012] ZASCA
13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)
at
para 18 cited with approval by the Constitutional Court in
Airports
Company South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Limited and
Others
[2018]
ZACC 33
at
para 29
.
See too
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2013] ZASCA 176; [2014] 1 All SA 517 (SCA); 2014
(2) SA 494 (SCA).
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and another
[2021] ZACC 13; 2021(8) BCLR 807 (CC); 2021(6) SA
1 (CC); Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and others [2021] ZASCA 99; [2021]
3 All SA 647 (SCA);
2022(1) SA 100 (SCA).
## [20]The
remarks of the Constitutional Court in context of internal appeals
where administrative action is in issue have force in this
context
too. SeeKoyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others (CCT 53/08) [2009]
ZACC 23; 2009 (12) BCLR 1192 (CC) ; 2010 (4) SA 327
(CC)
[20]
The
remarks of the Constitutional Court in context of internal appeals
where administrative action is in issue have force in this
context
too. See
Koyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others (CCT 53/08) [2009]
ZACC 23; 2009 (12) BCLR 1192 (CC) ; 2010 (4) SA 327
(CC)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Hennops Sport (Pty) Ltd v Luhan Auto (Pty) Ltd (A52/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 953 (2 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 953High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)96% similar
Ngobeni v PSG Insure and Others (14433/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1158 (5 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1158High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)96% similar
Babcock Ntuthuko Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited and Others (64288/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 865 (17 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 865High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)96% similar
Royal AM Football Club (Pty) Ltd v National Soccer League and Others (2025/054266) [2025] ZAGPPHC 664 (7 July 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 664High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)96% similar
Royal AM Football Club (Pty) Ltd v Venter N.O and Others (2025-011702) [2025] ZAGPPHC 131 (5 February 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 131High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)96% similar