Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 286South Africa
Adendorff N.O v Savrez Trading (Pty) Ltd and Another (Reasons) (2025/080510) [2025] ZAWCHC 286 (9 July 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Adendorff N.O v Savrez Trading (Pty) Ltd and Another (Reasons) (2025/080510) [2025] ZAWCHC 286 (9 July 2025)
Adendorff N.O v Savrez Trading (Pty) Ltd and Another (Reasons) (2025/080510) [2025] ZAWCHC 286 (9 July 2025)
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sino date 9 July 2025
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case number: 2025-080510
In the matter between:
HUBERT PAUL FLEISCH
ADENDORFF N.O.
(trustee
for the time being of the Adendorff Trust (IT 11635/99)
and
SAVREZ
TRADING (PTY) LTD
Applicant
First
respondent
JAMES
OPENSHAW ZERVAS
Second
respondent
REASONS
DELIVERED ON 9 JULY 2025
VAN
ZYL AJ
:
Introduction
1.
On 11 June 2025 I granted the following
order in the urgent court:
1.
The respondents’ application
for a postponement is dismissed.
2.
The applicant’s application is
dealt with as urgent in accordance with the provisions of Rule 6(12),
and the applicant’s
non-compliance with regular service,
notices, and timelines is condoned.
3.
Pending the final resolution of
arbitration proceedings
to be
instituted by the first respondent within 30 (thirty) days from the
date of this order:
3.1.
It is declared that the applicant
[having paid to the trust account of DELBERG ATTORNEYS the amount of
R1 500 000.00 (one
million five hundred thousand rand)],
has provided sufficient substituted security for an alleged builders’
lien exercised
by the first respondent over the immovable property
described as 1[...] H[...] Street (Erf 1[...]), Springfield, Somerset
Lakes
Estate, Somerset West, Western Cape Province (“the
property”).
3.2.
The continuous duration of the
substituted security is conditional upon punctual compliance by the
first respondent with the following
procedural and substantive
matters:
3.2.1.
The applicant and the first
respondent must, within 7 (seven) days from the date of this order,
reach an agreement regarding the
person to be appointed as
arbitrator. If no agreement can be reached, then:-
a)
after the lapse of 7 (seven) days,
but within 10 (ten) days from date of this order, the first
respondent must request the President
for the time being of the South
African Institute of Architects (“SAIA”) to nominate 2
(two) suitably qualified arbitrators
who must have at least 10 (ten)
years’ experience as arbitrators; and
b)
Miltons Matsemela Attorneys (“MMA”),
with contact person Izak Venter, must within 3 (three) days from the
date of the
nomination referred to in subparagraph (a) select one of
the arbitrators nominated by the SAIA to serve as arbitrator.
c)
In the alternative to sub-paragraphs
(a) and (b), and if the SAIA or MMA is unwilling, unable or
non-responsive to nominate or select
(as the case may be) an
arbitrator as set out above within a period of 3 (three) days after
having been requested to nominate or
select (as the case may be)
then, within 3 (three) days after such failure to nominate or select
(as the case may be) the first
respondent must request the
Chairperson of the Cape Bar Council to nominate 2 (two) suitably
qualified arbitrators with at least
10 (ten) years’ experience
as arbitrators; and
d)
MMA, with contact person Izak
Venter, must within 3 (three) days from date of the nomination
referred to in sub-paragraph (c) select
one of the arbitrators
nominated by the Chairperson of the Cape Bar Council to serve as the
arbitrator.
3.2.2 The
first respondent must make initial payment of fees and costs which
may be payable to the arbitrator, on demand,
for purposes of
instituting the arbitration.
3.2.3 The
first respondent must serve and file its Statement of Claim in the
arbitration within 30 (thirty) days from
the date of this order.
3.2.4 The
applicant (through its attorneys of record, Delberg Attorneys) must
be copied into, and receive copies of,
all correspondence and
documents submitted to all of the individuals or entities referred to
in paragraphs 3.2.1, 3.2.2 and 3.2.3.
3.3
If the first respondent fails to comply with any timelines or dates
or other requirements
as set out in paragraph 3.2 (including all
sub-paragraphs) (or such extended dates as the parties may agree
upon), then the applicant
shall be released from the security set in
the amount of R1 500 000.00 (one million five hundred
thousand rand) and Delberg
Attorneys shall be entitled to make
payment of said amount to an account nominated by the applicant.
4.
The first respondent is ordered,
within 2 (two) days from the date of this order, to:
4.1
remove its security
guard(s)/employee(s)/agent(s) stationed at the property, and hand
over and grant unrestricted possession of
and access to the property
to the applicant; and
4.2
provide the applicant with all keys,
access control equipment, and related items and devices required for
access to the property.
5.
In respect to the further conduct of
the arbitration proceedings and following compliance with paragraphs
3 and 4 (including all
sub-paragraphs):
5.1.
The applicant must file its
Statement of Defence and Counterclaim (if any) within 15 (fifteen)
days after receipt and filing of
the first respondent’s
Statement of Claim.
5.2.
The applicant and the first
respondent must hold a pre-arbitration conference with the appointed
arbitrator within 10 (ten) days
after the close of pleadings, failing
which either party may request the arbitrator to nominate a date and
time suitable to the
arbitrator for when the pre-arbitration
conference will take place. At such pre-arbitration conference
the parties must agree
on the further timelines for the conduct of
the arbitration and, failing agreement, the arbitrator must appoint
such dates.
6.
If the first respondent fails to
comply with any timelines or dates or other requirements for and in
relation to the effective management
of the arbitration, as set out
in paragraph 5 and/or as may be agreed to between the parties and/or
as determined by the arbitrator,
then the applicant may request the
arbitrator formally to consider and issue an interim award or notice
recording such non-compliance
and the effect thereof, whereafter the
applicant shall be released from the security set in the amount of
R1 500 000.00
(one million five hundred thousand rand), and
Delberg Attorneys shall be entitled to make payment of said amount to
an account
nominated by the applicant.
7.
The respondents, jointly and severally,
the one paying, the other to be absolved, shall pay the applicant’s
costs in the urgent
application, as well as the costs of the
respondents’ application for postponement, on the scale as
between attorney and
client. These costs will include the costs
consequent upon the employment of both senior and junior counsel on
behalf of
the applicant, as well as travelling and accommodation
costs.
2.
These are, briefly, the reasons for the
grant of the order.
3.
The applicant trust has one trustee, and I
refer to the applicant interchangeably as “it” or “he”.
The respondents’
application for postponement
4.
The
application was instituted on 30 May 2025 and served on the
respondents via email on the same day.
[1]
Late in the afternoon before the hearing of the application, the
respondents caused an application for postponement to be emailed
to
the applicant. The Court was provided with a copy on the
morning of the hearing.
5.
Having
heard argument and having considered the matter, I concluded in the
exercise of my discretion that a postponement should
not be granted.
There are many authorities dealing with postponement applications.
Suffice it to say that the respondents’
application was far
removed from the standard set out in
Myburgh
Transport v Botha t/a SA Truck Bodies
:
[2]
“
1. The trial
Judge has a discretion as to whether an application for
a postponement should be granted or refused.
2. That discretion
must be exercised judicially. It should not be exercised capriciously
or upon any wrong principle, but for substantial
reasons.
…
5. A Court should be
slow to refuse a postponement where the true reason for a party's
non-preparedness has been fully explained,
where his unreadiness to
proceed is not due to delaying tactics and where justice demands that
he should have further time for
the purpose of presenting his case.
6. An application for
a postponement must be made timeously, as soon as the circumstances
which might justify such an application
become known to the
applicant. Where, however, fundamental fairness and justice justifies
a postponement, the Court may in an appropriate
case allow such an
application for postponement, even if the application was not so
timeously made.
7. An application for
postponement must always be bona fide and not used
simply as a tactical manoeuvre for the purposes
of obtaining an
advantage to which the applicant is not legitimately entitled.
8. Considerations of
prejudice will ordinarily constitute the dominant component of the
total structure in terms of which the discretion
of a Court will be
exercised. What the Court has primarily to consider is whether
any prejudice caused by a postponement to
the adversary of the
applicant for a postponement can fairly be compensated by an
appropriate order of costs or any other ancillary
mechanisms.
9. The Court should
weigh the prejudice which will be caused to the respondent in such an
application if the postponement is granted
against the prejudice
which will be caused to the applicant if it is not.
10. Where the
applicant for a postponement has not made his application timeously,
or is otherwise to blame with respect to
the procedure which he has
followed, but justice nevertheless justifies a postponement in the
particular circumstances of a case,
the Court in its discretion might
allow the postponement but direct the applicant in a suitable case to
pay the wasted costs of
the respondent occasioned to such a
respondent on the scale of attorney and client. …
”
6.
In the application, the respondents failed
to give an adequate explanation for their failure to deliver opposing
papers to the main
application. They made bald averments that the
second respondent was in Australia, had to attend to his son's golf
tournament,
had meetings, and had to collect his daughter from school
in the afternoons. It was further alleged that the respondents
were unable to provide their attorneys with financial instructions
sooner, but they nevertheless attached a payment confirmation
from a
South African bank account. Notably, they failed to disclose
any defence to the relief sought in the main application,
other than
making an unsubstantiated allegation that the applicant was seeking
to pierce the corporate veil.
7.
The respondents had been aware of the
pending application for ten days. They had legal
representation. No proper explanation
was given for the failure
to act sooner. The application for a postponement had the hallmarks
of an attempt to delay the proceedings.
No good or strong
reasons were provided in support of the request for a postponement,
and no full and satisfactory explanation
was given of the facts that
gave rise to the application. As postponement applications go,
it was vague and sketchy, and
the supporting affidavit had not been
properly commissioned as contemplated in the Justices of the Peace
and Commissioners of Oaths
Act 16 of 1963.
8.
The
respondents did not tender the costs that would be occasioned by the
suggested postponement.
[3]
9.
The prejudice that the applicant was
suffering in not having access to and possession of his property far
outweighed any prejudice
to be suffered by the respondents in
proceeding with the matter. As appears from what is set out
below on the merits of the
main application, the respondents’
lien over the property was sufficiently secured by the amount of R1,5
million held in
trust. The respondents said that they wanted
the dispute giving rise to the exercise of the lien (whatever that
dispute might
be, as the respondents had not told either the Court or
the applicant what it entailed) resolved by arbitration, but failed
to
take any steps to commence with arbitration proceedings. The
applicant was compelled to ask the Court to make an order in
that
respect, which was done.
10.
The
respondents gave no indication at all as to what the nature of their
defence to the applicant’s claims would be, or what
the
disputes were that supported the respondents’ lien over the
property.
[4]
There was thus
nothing upon which the Court could exercise it discretion to conclude
that it would be in the interests of justice
to delay the hearing of
the application. There was nothing upon which to consider that
the postponement would not simply
be kicking the ball to another
judge who would have to deal with the same situation a week down the
line.
11.
I accordingly refused the postponement
application.
The main
application
12.
A residential immovable property situated
in Somerset West is at the core of these proceedings. The
disputes between the parties
have been ongoing for a period of almost
two years. The present application is the fourth one that the
applicant has been
compelled to institute against the respondents in
relation to the property. The second respondent has at all relevant
times been
the first respondent’s sole director and
representative.
13.
In July 2023 the parties concluded two
written agreements, in terms of which:
13.1.
The applicant purchased the property from
the first respondent for the sum of R999 500,00; and
13.2.
The parties concluded a building agreement
in terms of which the first respondent would construct a dwelling on
the property for
the sum of R1 500 500,00.
14.
The applicant has paid the sum of R2 205
451,50 to the first respondent pursuant to the conclusion of the
agreements.
The previous
litigation between the parties
15.
During
2024 it came to the applicant’s attention that the first
respondent had sold the property to a third party, despite
the
existence of the agreements and the fact that the applicant has paid
the purchase price in full). In March 2024 the applicant
therefore instituted an urgent application to interdict the transfer
of the property to the third party. The parties agreed
to the
terms of an order at the time,
[5]
in terms of which the first respondent would repay the applicant the
amount paid under the agreements, and costs, failing which
the
transfer of the property would be interdicted.
16.
The
first respondent failed to comply with the terms of the order, and in
September 2024 the applicant instituted an urgent application
and
obtained an order
[6]
to compel
the first respondent to comply with the terms of the agreements and
to obtain registration of transfer of the property.
The balance
outstanding under the agreements, namely R294 548,50, was paid into
the applicant’s attorneys’ trust account
pending the
completion of the building work on the property.
17.
The first respondent again failed to comply
with the order and failed to have the property transferred into the
applicant’s
name. It also came to the applicant's
knowledge that the first respondent had allowed unknown third parties
to take occupation
of the property
18.
The
applicant therefore instituted an urgent contempt application which
was set down for 10 February 2025 . The parties, once again,
agreed
to the terms of an order
[7]
in
terms of which the first respondent would comply with the order in
accordance with a specified timeline. The respondents were
ordered to
give notice to the occupants to vacate the property by 30 April 2025.
19.
The property was transferred into the
applicant's name on 5 May 2025.
The events leading up
to the present application
20.
On 29 April 2025 the applicant's attorneys
wrote to the respondents' attorney to inform the respondents that the
applicant would
be taking possession of the property once transfer
had been given, and that the parties should meet at the property on 2
May 2025
to compile a detailed list of all buildings works not yet
completed.
21.
The applicant attended the property on 2
May 2025 (before transfer, and without a response from the
respondents or their attorney)
to view the property. The occupants
who should have vacated by the end of April 2025 were still in
occupation of the property.
They informed the applicant that
they had been told by the respondents that they could remain in
occupation of the property until
their own property (also being built
by the first respondent in the estate) was complete.
22.
Whilst at the property the applicant
noticed worrisome electrical connections. He could not gain
access to the inside of the
property to see what the situation was.
23.
On 6 May 2025 the respondents’
attorney replied to the applicant’s attorneys’
correspondence of 29 April 2025.
He said that, according to the
first respondent, the applicant was indebted to the first respondent
in the sum of R1 467 000,00
(being R500 000,00 in respect of
variation orders issued, R592 000,00 in respect of enlarging the
structure, and R375 000,00 in
respect of VAT on the purchase price).
The first respondent accordingly had a builder's lien over the
property and, until
payment was received, the first respondent would
enforce the lien and refuse the applicant access to the property.
24.
This correspondence came as a shock to the
applicant, because the first respondent has never previously
mentioned or demanded payment
in any amount, or indicated that the
applicant would not be granted possession and control of the property
because of funds that
were owing. The applicant trust denies
that it is indebted to the first respondent in any of the amounts
claimed.
25.
In terms of the building agreement (which
the applicant subsequently cancelled), any dispute in respect of
monies owed must be resolved
by way of arbitration. This
provision survived the cancelled agreement.
26.
On 8 May 2025 the applicant’s
attorneys wrote to the respondents’ attorney, confirming that
the applicant disputes any
indebtedness to the first respondent and
that the lien is disputed, but that the applicant had nonetheless
paid the sum of R1.5
million into his attorneys’ trust account
to serve as security for any amounts that the first respondent may be
entitled
to upon arbitration.
27.
On 15 May 2025 the applicant’s
attorneys wrote to the respondents’ attorney again, and
attached proof of payment of
the R1.5 million into their trust
account. They confirmed that the amount was formally tendered
to serve as security for
any amount which may be due to the first
respondent upon arbitration.
28.
On 20 May 2025 the respondents’
attorney replied that the first respondent was not obliged to accept
the substituted security
and would not waive its alleged lien over
the property. He stated that the first respondent would
institute arbitration proceedings.
The first respondent
stationed a guard at the property, preventing access thereto by the
applicant or any third party.
29.
On 22 May 2025, the applicant cancelled the
building agreement (after demand was made to comply) given that the
building works were
incomplete and posed serious safety concerns.
It transpired that the necessary completion certificates had not been
issued
in respect of the electrical installation, the plumbing, the
roof structure, and other aspects, and the municipality had not
issued
an occupancy certificate. The applicant was unable to
insure the property until an occupancy certificate had been issued.
In fact, on 13 May 2025 and again on 19 May 2025 the building
inspector for the area wrote to the applicant, stating that no
occupancy
certificate had been issued, that a building inspector
would be sent to the property and, should there be a transgression,
the
owner (being the applicant) would be served with a notice to
comply. It appears that the respondents had been informed of
this situation during February 2025 already.
30.
On 16 May 2025 the building inspector
inspected the property. In correspondence dated 26 May 2025 the
municipality confirmed
that no occupancy certificate would be issued
until amended building plans had been submitted – the dwelling
had therefore
not been constructed in accordance with the approved
plans. A transgression notice was issued to the applicant on 3
June
2025 because the property was being occupied unlawfully in the
absence of an occupancy certificate. It was confirmed that the
continued
occupation without the certificate constituted a criminal
offence.
31.
The applicant subsequently obtained a
report from an expert to the effect that the electrical installations
at the property did
not comply with the relevant regulations,
presented an immediate danger of electrocution, fire, or serious
property damage, was
unlawful and had to be decommissioned
immediately.
32.
As the property had already been
transferred to the applicant, the risks and responsibilities in
respect thereof rested on the applicant.
He could not mitigate such
risks as he had no access to the property.
33.
The applicant's trustee is 75 years old,
and the applicant purchased the property as a retirement dwelling.
His previous residential
dwelling was sold in April 2025 and he was
living with a friend, with his furniture in storage. He cannot afford
alternative accommodation,
given that R1.8 million (the security
tendered plus the balance owing under the building agreement) is in
his attorneys’
trust account. He has already spent more than
R800 000,00 in legal fees, combating what appears on the papers to be
frankly abusive
conduct by the respondents.
34.
Given the historical conduct of the
respondents in respect of the property, I agreed with the submission
by counsel for the applicant
that the respondents – for an
unexplained reason - wished to delay the applicant taking possession
of the property for as
long as possible. There was no reason
not to grant the relief sought by the applicant.
35.
Where
a debtor/creditor or enrichment lien is claimed (the respondents have
not indicated the nature of the lien upon which they
rely),
[8]
and sufficient security has been tendered,
[9]
there exists no basis for the respondents to continue retaining
occupation of the property, whether physically or otherwise, such
as
by denying access through a guard at the property. This Court
had a discretion
[10]
to grant
access and occupation to the applicant, and to cause the security to
be preserved
pendente
lite:
“
[20] It follows
that the conclusion reached in the Bombay Properties case,
that in the case of a jus retentionis based
on an enrichment lien the
court does not have a discretion to deprive the lien holder of his
possession or that the substitute
security for such a lien would be
meaningless, is clearly wrong. The Sandton Square
Finance case made it clear that
the court does have a discretion
in respect of an enrichment lien.
Quite clearly once it is
established that a court has a discretion in relation to a
debtor/creditor lien, there is no reason why
such a distinction
should not extend to the enrichment lien.
On appeal
counsel for Pheiffer did not persist with the argument that the
approach in Sandton Square was wrong.
It would consequently
be untenable to allow substitution of security in the one case
(debtor/creditor lien) but not in the other
(enrichment lien).
[21] The principle
articulated in the Sandton Square Finance case is sound
and based on considerations of equity
and justice. I do not agree
with the contention that the security tendered by the third
respondent is meaningless.
In
my view once Pheiffer has fully quantified and proved his claim, he
will be entitled to payment in respect of the improvements
to the
property. As soon as sufficient security has been tendered,
Pheiffer has no basis to continue occupying the property.
As the
court below rightly held, he must vacate the property
.
”
[11]
36.
This took care of the declaratory relief
sought, which was a necessary pronouncement for the ancillary orders
sought relating to
access and control, but also occupancy, which an
owner with a real right is entitled to even without establishing
irreparable damage,
inconvenience, or the lack of alternative
remedies - typically in the nature of a
rei
vindicatio.
37.
The
chronology of events is clear from the facts set out above. I agreed
that the application was sufficiently urgent for hearing
on the
urgent roll. There was an ongoing violation of the applicant’s
rights,
[12]
and the
respondents had not given any indication of a desire speedily to
resolve the issues between the parties – not even
at the
hearing of the application.
38.
The
terms of the order to be granted were debated during argument.
The only real opposition raised by the respondents’
counsel was
the potential prejudice to the respondents should the applicant’s
attorneys be permitted to release the substituted
security to the
applicant in the event that the respondents did not comply with the
timeframes for instituting and prosecuting
the arbitration
proceedings. No objection was raised to the amount of the substituted
security or to its holding in the applicant’s
attorneys’
trust account pending the finalisation of the arbitration
proceedings, or to the suggested timeframes. The
relief sought
by the applicant was therefore changed
[13]
to reflect that the arbitrator would decide whether the respondents
had breached the terms of the court order, and not the applicant
or
his attorneys.
Costs
39.
The
applicant was successful, and there was no reason why costs should
not follow the event.
[14]
40.
In
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[15]
the Constitutional Court stated as follows in relation to punitive
costs orders:
“
More
than 100 years ago, Innes CJ stated the principle that costs on an
attorney and client scale are awarded when a court wishes
to mark its
disapproval of the conduct of a litigant. Since then this
principle has been endorsed and applied in a long line
of cases and
remains applicable. Over the years, courts have awarded
costs on an attorney and client scale to mark
their disapproval of
fraudulent, dishonest or mala fides (bad faith) conduct;
vexatious
conduct; and conduct that amounts to an abuse of the process
of court
.”
41.
An
extended meaning was given to the concept of “vexatious”
in
Johannesburg
City Council v Television and Electrical Distributors (Pty) Ltd and
another
:
[16]
“ …
in
appropriate circumstances the conduct of a litigant may be adjudged
‘vexatious’ within the extended meaning that
has been
placed upon this term in a number of decisions, that is, when such
conduct has resulted in ‘unnecessary trouble
and expense which
the other side ought not to bear (In re Alluvial Creek
1929 CPD 532
at 535)
.”
42.
I was inclined to grant costs on the scale
as between attorney and client given the conduct of the respondents
which caused the
institution of these proceedings, and the nonchalant
manner in which they treated the litigation between them and the
applicant.
Order
43.
In the circumstances, I granted the order
referred to at the outset of these reasons.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
Mr J. Roux SC and Ms S. Bosch, instructed by
Delberg Attorneys Inc.
For
the respondents:
Mr D. Whitcomb, instructed by RC Smith &
Associates Inc.
[1]
It
was also served by the Sheriff on the second respondent on 30 May
2025 and on the first respondent on 2 June 2025.
[2]
1991
(3) SA 310
(NmS) at 314G-315I.
[3]
Shilubana
and others v Nwamitwa
[2007] ZACC 14
;
2007 (5) SA 620
(CC) para 12: “
A
standard way to mitigate prejudice to other parties is for the party
asking for the court’s indulgence to postpone a hearing
–
particularly one requested at the last minute – to offer, or
to be ordered, to pay the costs of the postponement.
”
[4]
T.A.M-W
v C.M.M
[2025] ZAWCHC 217
(23 May 2025) para 3: “
Tellingly
however, and contrary to clear Constitutional Court authority (the
highest court in South Africa), and despite
the respondent having
devoted 21 paragraphs to his reasons for requesting a postponement,
nowhere did he provide even a brief
outline of his defence to the
contempt application itself, save for a bare denial…
”
[5]
Granted
on 19 March 2024 under case number 4914/2024.
[6]
Granted
on 10 September 2024 under case number 11573/2024.
[7]
Granted
on 10 February 2025 under case number 11573/2025.
[8]
See
Blair
Atholl Home Owners Association (NPC) v Meyer and another
[2023]
ZAGPPHC 2055 (22 December 2023) para 31,
with
reference to
Sandton
Square Finance (Pty) Ltd v Vigliotti
1997 (1) SA 826
(W) and
Pheiffer
v Van Wyk
2015 (5) SA 464 (SCA).
[9]
In
the present matter, security was tendered in an amount greater than
the amount claimed, with proof that it has been paid into
an
attorney’s trust account.
[10]
Astralita
Estates (Pty) Ltd v Rix
1984 (1) SA 500
(C) at 503B-E.
[11]
Pheiffer
v Van Wyk
2015 (5) SA 464
(SCA) paras 20-21. Emphasis supplied.
[12]
See
South
African Breweries (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Corporative Governance and
Traditional Affairs and Another
[2021] 4 All SA 189
(WCC) paras 15-16; 22-23.
[13]
Further
minor amendments were made to the reliefs sought in the notice of
motion.
[14]
See
Sackville
West v Nourse and another
1925
AD 516.
[15]
2019
(6) SA 253
(CC) para 223. Emphasis supplied.
[16]
1997
(1) SA 157
(A) at 177D.
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