Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 315South Africa
Badenhorst and Another v Badenhorst (19578/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 315 (15 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
15 October 2024
Headnotes
in its name with Nedbank Ltd in any manner or form without the express prior consent of the other to do so.
Judgment
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## Badenhorst and Another v Badenhorst (19578/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 315 (15 October 2024)
Badenhorst and Another v Badenhorst (19578/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 315 (15 October 2024)
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sino date 15 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 19578/2024
In
the matter between:
DALEEN
CORNELIA BADENHORST
First Applicant
CHEETAH
ESTATES CC
Second Applicant
And
CASPER
HENDRIK BADENHORST
Respondent
Heard:
08 October 2024
Delivered:
Electronically on 15 October 2024
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
Introduction
[1]
Two urgent applications served before this court on 08 October 2024.
The first is
an application by the applicants seeking an order that
the respondent be interdicted and restrained
pendente lite
from
making any transfers, withdrawals or payments of any nature or form
from the second applicant's bank account without the first
applicant's prior consent. The second is a counter application by the
respondent in which he seeks an order that pending the final
determination of the application for the second applicant's winding
up as a solvent entity on the just and equitable grounds under
case
number 20266/24, neither the applicant nor the respondent shall be
entitled to transact on the second applicant's bank account
held in
its name with Nedbank Ltd in any manner or form without the express
prior consent of the other to do so.
The
Applicants’ Application
[2]
The first applicant was married to the respondent's brother. The
second applicant
was established by the respondent and his late
brother, who were 50/50 members of the second applicant. The
respondent and the
first applicant's late husband were also 50/50
members of another close cooperation, Midnight Trading 106 CC
('Midnight Spark')
, which conducted the filling station
business Careno Strand, Western Cape. On 23 February 2020, the first
applicant's late husband
passed away, and the first applicant
inherited his member's interest in Midnight Spark and the second
applicant herein.
[3]
For the past four years, since the passing away of the first
applicant's husband,
the applicant managed the second applicant by
carrying on the business of the second applicant in the ordinary
course while the
respondent managed the business of Midnight's Spark.
The first applicant drew a salary from the second applicant and
attended to
all its day-to-day operations, while the respondent did
the same regarding Midnight Spark. The first applicant states that
during
2024, it came to her knowledge that the respondent was
mismanaging the affairs of Midnight Spark by physically removing cash
from
the business of Midnight Spark and running the business from his
personal bank account. Netbank threatened to call up Midnight Spark's
overdraft facility. Astron, the fuel supplier and landlord, claimed
more than R1,1 million for utilities and R250,000 for franchise
fees,
which Midnight Spark could not pay.
[4]
Pursuant thereto, on 2 September 2024, the first applicant launched
an application
for the liquidation of Midnight Spark in this court
under case number 19124/24. Although the respondent disputed that
Midnight
Spark was unable to pay its debts, he agreed to Midnight
Spark’s liquidation on just and equitable grounds. Midnight
Spark
was accordingly placed in provisional liquidation by this court
on Thursday, 19 September 2024. While that application against
Midnight Spark was still pending, on 11 September 2024, the
respondent made a unilateral transfer of R70,000 from the bank
account
of the second applicant and paid it to the trust account of
his attorneys of record. The respondent did so without the first
applicant’s
knowledge and consent.
[5]
As previously stated, the first applicant asserted that they are
50/50 members of
the second applicant. The first applicant states
that except for the day-to-day management and payments done in the
ordinary course
of the second applicant’s business, which is by
agreement conducted by the first applicant, neither one of them may
accordingly
make decisions for and on behalf of the second applicant
without the authority of the other, and, except as aforesaid, neither
the first applicant nor the respondent may make unilateral transfers,
withdrawals and or payments that are not in the ordinary course
of
the second applicant's business, from its bank account.
[6]
The first applicant states that the respondent did precisely that
when he caused a
transfer of funds belonging to the second applicant
from the bank account of the second applicant to the trust account of
the firm
of attorneys acting for the respondent personally without
the first applicant's knowledge and consent. According to the first
applicant,
the respondent appropriated a total sum of R70 000 and
presumably used the said funds for his personal legal expenses,
alternatively
that of Midnight Spark Trading 106 CC, to oppose a
liquidation application brought against the latter and to instruct
his attorneys
to draft and institute a liquidation application
against the second respondent. The liquidation application against
the second
applicant was, in fact, subsequently issued by this court
under case number 20266/2024.
[7]
In addition to not being authorised to withdraw funds from the second
applicant's
account, the first applicant asserts that the transfer
was not in the ordinary course of the second applicant's business.
When
the first applicant called upon the respondent to return the
R70,000 to the second applicant, the respondent refused to do so. The
first applicant instructed her attorneys of record to immediately
address a letter of demand to the respondent and the respondent's
attorneys for the refund of the R70,000. In response, the
respondent's attorneys stated that the first applicant and the
respondent
each own a 50% member's interest in Midnight Spark Trading
106 CC and in the second applicant. The respondent's attorneys
further
asserted that both the first applicant and the respondent are
entitled to 50% of the profit and loss of each of these entities and
that the respondent would not refund the R70 000.
[8]
The respondent contended that because he owns 50% of the member's
interest in the
second applicant, he is entitled to 50% of the profit
and loss of the second applicant and that he cannot steal his own
money.
To this end, the first applicant asserted that the respondent
is treating the money belonging to the second applicant as his own
and considered it his money. According to the first applicant, the
respondent is intent on dipping into the funds of the second
applicant as and when it pleases him without the applicant's
knowledge and consent and without having to account to the first
applicant in any way whatsoever.
[9]
The first applicant contended that the respondent's stance described
above is wrong
and that the second applicant and the first applicant
have the right, which is at the very least prima facie established,
to protect
the funds belonging to the second applicant, and to
prevent unauthorised transfers, withdrawals and or payments from the
bank account
of the second applicant by one of its members on the
basis that it is his money. The first applicant contended that prima
facie,
the respondent is not within his right to act in a unilateral
and unauthorised manner.
[10]
Furthermore, the first applicant stated that the respondent already
has a debt loan in the second
applicant amounting to R1 420 972.76 as
of 29 February 2024. In other words, the respondent owes the said
amount to the second
applicant. The first applicant feared that if
the interdict was not granted, the respondent would make further
transfers from the
second applicant's bank account without her
consent to the prejudice of the second applicant. The first applicant
implored the
court to grant the relief claimed in the notice of
motion.
The
Respondent’s Counter Application
[11]
The respondent thoroughly explained how he worked with his brother,
the first applicant's deceased
husband, from 1991 after the
respondent sold his service station in Pretoria and bought Camps Bay
Service Station situated in Camps
Bay. The respondent stated that
during the lifetime of his brother (the first applicant's deceased
husband), they agreed that his
brother would take over the day-to-day
management of the Marine Drive Service Station (second applicant),
and they proceeded to
purchase the Caltex Careno Service Station
which was subsequently transferred to Midnight Spark Trading 106 CC.
[12]
The respondent and his brother were 50/50 members in Midnight Spark
106 CC. The respondent stated
that he and his brother considered
themselves to be equal partners in both service stations. They were
both fully entitled to participate
in the management of both
businesses and to share in the profit and loss of both businesses, in
accordance with section 46 of the
Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984
('the Close Corporation Act').
As regards profit sharing, the
respondent asserted that the understanding between the respondent and
his brother was that if there
were distributable profits available in
either business, each of them could pay themselves up to 50% thereof
as and when they required
the funds without seeking the other's
permission to do so.
[13]
If there were insufficient profits available and they needed money,
they would similarly each
withdraw funds from a loan account without
seeking the other’s permission to do so. They trusted one
another implicitly and
had full confidence in the fact that each of
them had the best interest of the businesses at heart, as is required
by section 42
of the Close Corporation Act.
[14]
The untimely passing of his brother on 23 February 2020 resulted in
the first applicant's inheritance
of his brother's 50% member's
interest in both Midnight Spark and the second applicant in this
matter. As a result, the applicant
became his business partner by
circumstances rather than design. According to the respondent, the
first applicant and he proved
to be incompatible business partners,
and relations between them soon soured to the point where it became
apparent that they could
not cooperate and work together in managing
either the second applicant or Midnight Spark's affairs. This has
resulted in both
entities being effectively paralysed by deadlock and
the institution of the applications for the winding up of both
Midnight Spark
and the second applicant on just and equitable
grounds.
[15]
The respondent denied that the first applicant is entitled to the
relief she seeks because, as
the second applicant's founding member
and its current 50% member, he has always been fully entitled to
operate its bank account
and to make transfers, withdrawals and or
payments therefrom as he considered appropriate. The respondent
stated that there is
simply no basis in fact or in law for the first
applicant to claim that merely because she is also a salaried
employee of the second
applicant, her 50% member's interest in it is
somehow elevated to super status entitling her to control its
finances, business
and bank account to his exclusion.
[16]
Given the complete breakdown in relations between the first applicant
and the respondent, the
respondent averred that he is prepared to
consent to an order that prohibits both the first applicant and the
respondent from transacting
on the second applicant's bank account
without the other's consent pending the final determination of the
liquidation application
under case number 20266/2024. The respondent
admitted that neither the first applicant nor the respondent may make
decisions for
and on behalf of the second applicant without the
authority of the other. To this end, the respondent stated that it is
accordingly
surprising that the first applicant has taken it upon
herself to unilaterally decide to join the second applicant as a
party to
this application and to instruct her attorneys to represent
the second applicant when she is clearly and by her own admission not
entitled to do so.
[17]
The respondent admitted that he transferred R70,000 to himself on
11 September 2024 and
stated that it was a portion of his profit
share. He denied that he required the first applicant’s
specific prior consent
to do so, just as the first applicant would
not have required his consent to transfer a portion of her own profit
share to herself.
The respondent denied that he unlawfully
appropriated the R70 000 from the second applicant or that by
paying himself what
he was entitled to receive as a member of the
second applicant can somehow be considered to fall outside of the
ordinary course
of business. In his view, what he has chosen to do
with his own funds is none of the first applicant's business.
[18]
The respondent also denied that the first and second applicants have
any right whatsoever to
prevent him from claiming and paying himself
his profit share as and when he requires it. According to the
respondent, the first
applicant's evidence and conduct in this
application simply betray her lack of knowledge and understanding of
the agreement between
the respondent and his late brother regarding
their joint management of the second applicant. The respondent asked
the court to
dismiss the first applicant's application with costs and
for the grant of the relief sought in the counter application.
Principal
Submissions by the parties
[19]
Mr Engela, who appeared for the applicant, submitted that the
applicants had established
a prima facie
right on the papers.
Counsel submitted that from the respondent's answering affidavit, the
respondent does not see anything wrong
with what he did. Mr Engela
referred the court to paragraph 28.2 of the respondent's answering
affidavit wherein the respondent
stated that his share of the profit
is his money and that he is entitled to pay himself as and when he
requires it, just as his
brother was entitled to do so.
[20]
Counsel argued that there was no association agreement between the
first applicant and the respondent
for such withdrawal. Mr Engela
further submitted that the respondent's conduct offends the
provisions of section 46(f) of the Close
Corporation Act. Counsel
implored the court to grant the relief sought to prevent the
respondent from making further unauthorised
withdrawals from the
second respondent's account.
[21]
On the other hand, Mr Coston, the respondent's Counsel, argued that
the respondent did not need
the first applicant's consent to withdraw
R70 000 from the second applicant's account. According to Counsel,
this has been done
before by the members of the second applicant.
Counsel further asserted that in terms of the counter application,
the respondent
is prepared to consent to an order that prohibits both
the first applicant and the respondent from transacting on the second
applicant's
bank account without the other's consent pending the
final determination of the liquidation application under case number
20266/2024.
[22]
According to Counsel, this is the best remedy in that if one of the
parties unreasonably refuses
his consent, the innocent party may
approach the court for a remedy. Mr Coston implored the court to
dismiss the applicants' application
and to grant the relief sought in
the counter application. According to Counsel, this is the best
remedy in that if one of the
parties unreasonably refuses his
consent, the innocent party may approach the court for a remedy. Mr
Coston implored the court
to dismiss the applicants' application and
to grant the relief sought in the counter application.
The
Applicable Legal Principles and Discussion
[23]
The applicants seek an interlocutory interdict. The granting of an
interim interdict pending
an action is an extraordinary remedy within
the discretion of the Court.
[1]
The requirements which an applicant for an interlocutory interdict
must satisfy are the following:
(a)
A
prima
facie
right;
(b) A well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted
and the ultimate relief is eventually
granted;
(c) A balance of
convenience in favour of the granting of the interim relief; and
(d) The absence of
any other satisfactory remedy.
[24]
For the sake of convenience, I will deal with the abovementioned
requirements for an interim
interdict vis-à-vis the present
matter in series or ad seriatim.
(a)
A prima facie right
;
[25]
An interim interdict will be granted if the court is satisfied that
the applicant has established
a
prima
facie
right
that the respondent has invaded it or threatened to do it.
[2]
In
Webster
v Mitchell,
[3]
the court stated that the right to be set up by an applicant for a
temporary interdict need not be shown by a balance of probabilities.
If it is prima facie established though open to some doubt that is
enough. In my view, this is so because the application is merely
interlocutory, and the effect of the granting thereof is only
temporary and not finally decisive of either party's rights. Thus,
the court will grant an interdict upon a degree of proof less
exacting than that required to grant a final interdict.
[26]
In the present matter, the first applicant is a 50% holder of
interest in the second applicant.
The first applicant averred that
the sum of R70,000 was unlawfully appropriated by the respondent and
used to fund his personal
legal expenses. When the first applicant
called upon the respondent to return the R70,000, the respondent
refused to do so. The
respondent contended that because he owns 50%
of the member's interest in the second applicant, he is entitled to
50% of the profit
and loss of the second applicant and that he cannot
steal his own money. In other words, the respondent considered the
money belonging
to the second applicant to be his own.
[27]
I must stress that each member of a closed corporation stands in a
fiduciary relationship to
the corporation.
[4]
Members of a close corporation owe the corporation fiduciary duties
and duties of care and skill. A member of a close corporation
must,
in relation to the close corporation, act honestly and in good faith
and must exercise such powers as he may have to manage
or represent
the corporation in the interest and for the benefit of the
corporation.
[5]
[28]
In bringing this application, the first applicant, in my view, acted
in the best interest of
the second applicant. On the respondent's
version, notwithstanding that there is no association agreement
between them as envisaged
in section 44 of the Close Corporation Act,
he believes that he can transfer funds from the bank of the second
applicant at will
without informing the first applicant of such
transfer, and without being under any obligation to repay any funds
to the second
applicant at all. The respondent asserted that the
first applicant's conduct displays her lack of knowledge and
understanding of
the agreement between the respondent and his late
brother regarding their joint management of the second applicant. In
my view,
this stance cannot be correct and should not be
countenanced.
[29]
After the passing of the applicant's husband, I must point out that
the first applicant and the
respondent never entered into an
association agreement to regulate the sharing of profits and internal
relationships. As such,
the respondent, in my view, could not
unilaterally withdraw the sum of R70 000 from the second respondent
without the knowledge
of the first applicant. I am mindful that the
first applicant and the respondent are entitled to participate in the
carrying on
of the corporation's business unless an association
agreement or the Act provides otherwise.
[6]
[30]
I am also mindful of the fact that in the absence of an association
agreement, each member has
the implied power to do any act that
entails the carrying on of the second applicant's business in the
ordinary course. However,
the respondent's unilateral withdrawal of
the sum of R70 000 from the second applicant's bank account, in my
view, did not involve
the carrying on of the second applicant's
business in the ordinary course.
[31]
I am of the firm opinion that the applicants have clearly established
their prima facie right
to the sanctity of the second applicant's
funds and to protect those funds from unilateral appropriation by the
respondent.
(b)
Well-Grounded apprehension of harm
[32]
The second requisite for an interlocutory interdict is a
well-grounded apprehension of irreparable
harm if the interim relief
is not granted.
[7]
Irreparable
harm or loss may be defined as the loss of property in circumstances
where its recovery is impossible or improbable.
The loss need not
necessarily be any financial: it may consist of an irremediable
breach of the applicant’s rights.
[8]
In the present matter, the first applicant asserted that the
respondent has a debit loan account in the second applicant amounting
to R1 420 972. 76 as of 29 February 2024.
[33]
The first applicant claimed that the respondent showed no remorse for
transferring R70,000 from
the bank account of the second respondent
without consent. The respondent regards this transfer as a payment of
his profit share
to the second applicant. According to the
respondent, his share of the profits is his money that he is entitled
to pay himself
as and when he requires it. The respondent denied that
the first or the second applicant had any right to prevent him from
claiming
and paying himself his profit share as and when he required
it.
[34]
It cannot be disputed that the first applicant and the respondent did
not agree on the payment
or withdrawal of the R70,000 by the
respondent. The respondent’s stance in my view is untenable and
displays a fundamental
misunderstanding of the rights and duties of
members of a close corporation as contained in sections 42, 46(f) and
51. Until a
dividend, if any, is agreed upon and determined in
accordance with the provisions of the Close Corporation Act, a member
of a Close
Corporation is by no means at liberty to make unilateral
payments from the bank account of the Close Corporation under the
guise
of paying a profit share to himself or herself.
[35]
Most importantly, the allegation that the respondent does not require
the first applicant's consent
for such unilateral transfers
explicitly offends section 46(f) of the Close Corporation Act, which
provides:
“
Payments by a
corporation to its members by reason only of their membership in
terms of section 51(1) shall be of such amounts and
be affected at
such times as the members
may
from time to time agree upon
,
and such payments shall be made to members in proportion to their
respective interests in the corporation.” (emphasis added)
[36]
The first applicant asserts that for the past four and half years
since the passing of her husband,
neither of them took a profit share
from the second applicant. On the contrary, they both owe the second
applicant substantial
amounts on loan accounts. Thus, the use of
profit shares by the respondent is completely misplaced in relation
to the second applicant,
as the profits of a close corporation can
only be distributed by its members by declaring a dividend. Moreover,
members of a close
corporation can only declare a dividend if there
was, in fact, a profit made in any given financial period after due
consideration
of the close corporation's financial positions, bearing
in mind, among others, the solvency test. To this end, section 51(1)
of
the Close Corporation Act provides:
“
(1)
Any payment by a corporation to any member by reasons only of his
membership, may be made only-
(a) if, after such
payment is made, the corporation's assets, fairly valued, exceed all
its liabilities;
(b) if the corporation is
able to pay its debts as they become due in the ordinary course of
its business; and
(c) if such payment will
in the particular circumstances not in fact render the corporation
unable to pay its debts as they become
due in the ordinary course of
its business.”
[37]
Evidently, no dividend has ever been declared by the first applicant
and the respondent in respect
of the second applicant, at least not
in the past four and half years of the applicant's membership in the
second applicant. Therefore,
no profit share was available for the
respondent at any given time. The applicant's apprehension that the
respondent will make
further unilateral transfers, withdrawals and/or
payments from the bank account of the second applicant is accordingly
more than
justified. In my view, the respondent's stance offends
section 46(f) of the Close Corporation Act and clearly shows that
further
harm is imminent if an interdictory relief is not granted. A
unilateral transfer of funds belonging to a corporate entity
diminishes
the entity's patrimony.
(c)
The Balance of Convenience
[38]
The third requisite for an interlocutory interdict is a balance of
convenience in favour of the
granting of the interim relief. The
court must weigh the prejudice to the applicant if the interlocutory
interdict is refused against
the prejudice to the respondent if it is
granted.
[9]
This is sometimes
called the balance of convenience.
[39]
The balance of convenience, in this case, is overwhelmingly in the
applicant's favour. I am mindful
that the second applicant is facing
a liquidation application and that the inconvenience of having funds
transferred, or withdrawn
or paid from its bank account is
prejudicial to the applicant and even creditors of the second
applicant. For the past four years,
the parties have never paid
themselves any profit share. As correctly pointed out by the first
applicant, it ill behoves a member
of a close corporation, in
circumstances where there was no members meeting, no approval of
financial statements, or otherwise,
to simply take it upon himself to
make a unilateral withdrawal from the bank account of the close
corporation on the basis that
he is paying himself what he perceives
to be entitled to.
[40]
In my view, the balance of convenience weighs heavily in favour of
granting the interdict. The
respondent's assertion that what he does
with the second respondent's funds is none of the first applicant's
business is precisely
why an interdict against the respondent is
necessary and appropriate. In any case, the applicants are merely
seeking an order
pendente lite,
pending the final
determination of the liquidation application which will barely
inconvenience the respondent.
(d)
Absence of any other satisfactory remedy
[41]
The fourth requisite for granting an interlocutory interdict is the
absence of another adequate
ordinary remedy. In the present matter,
the applicants have no other satisfactory remedy other than an
interim interdict. An application
for the liquidation of the second
applicant has been lodged with this Court. If an interim interdict is
not granted and pursuant
to the stance taken by the respondent, it is
most likely that the respondent would withdraw funds from the second
applicant at
whim under the auspices that it is his profit share.
This will be prejudicial to the applicants. In my view, this
requirement has
been satisfied. This leads me to the respondent's
counter-application.
The
Respondent’s Counter Application
[42]
The respondent contends that given the complete breakdown in
relations between him and the first
applicant as well as the
accompanying mistrust between them, he seeks an order directing that
pending the final determination of
the application for the second
applicant’s winding up as a solvent entity on the just and
equitable grounds under case number
20266/2024, neither the first
applicant nor the respondent shall be entitled to transact on the
second applicant’s bank account
in any manner or form without
the express prior consent of the other to do so.
[43]
This counter application, in my view, is ill-founded. The applicant
did not breach any provisions
of the Close Corporation Act. The first
applicant has not acted unlawfully, and there is no indication that
the applicant intends
to do so. The first applicant has not withdrawn
any funds from the second applicant without the respondent's
knowledge. The applicant
has been responsible for the day-to-day
management of the second applicant for the past four years, and she
has been drawing a
salary from the second applicant in return for
doing so. The respondent has done the same in respect of Midnight
Spark. The respondent
managed Midnight Spark and drew the same
salary.
[44]
The approval of the counter application is poised to have adverse
ramifications on the operational
dynamics of the second applicant.
Numerous financial disbursements necessitate daily and weekly
transactions from the second applicant's
bank account to sustain the
seamless functionality of the close corporation's business
operations. The first applicant has been
making these payments and
handling the bookkeeping of the second applicant in collaboration
with the second applicant's accountants
and auditors for several
years.
[45]
In my view, it will be impracticable for the applicant to obtain the
respondent's prior consent
for these types of transactions. If an
order is granted against the applicant without any valid reason, it
will essentially stop
the second applicant's business operations,
leading to an inevitable liquidation application against the second
applicant. More
so, the very purpose of the applicant's application
is to obtain an order preserving the status quo until the hearing of
the liquidation
application.
[46]
In the circumstances, the respondent’s counter application must
fail.
Order
[47]
Given all these considerations, the following order is granted:
47.1
The respondent's counter application is hereby dismissed.
47.2
Pending the final determination of the liquidation application under
case number 20266/2024, the respondent
is interdicted and restrained
pendente lite
from making any transfers, withdrawals or
payments from the second applicant’s bank account without the
first applicant’s
prior consent.
47.3
The respondent shall pay the first applicant’s costs on scale
C.
LEKHULENI JD
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
APPEARANCES
For the Applicant:
Mr Engela
Instructed by:
Morne Binedell Attorneys
and Conveyancers
Suite
10B, Old Dutch Square
Bellville
For the Respondent:
Mr Coston
Instructed by:
Hannes Pretorius
Bock & Bryant
81
Helderberg College Road
Somerset
West
[1]
Eriksen
Motors
(Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors, Warrenton, and Another
1973
(3) SA 685
(A) at 691C-G.
[2]
Zulu v
Minister of Defence
2005
(6) SA 446 (T).
[3]
Webster
v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186
(W) at 1188.
[4]
See section 42(1).
[5]
See section 42(2)(a)(i).
[6]
See section 46(a) of the Act.
[7]
Tshwane
City v Afriforum
2016
(6) SA 279
(CC) at 300B.
[8]
Braham
v Wood
1956
(1) SA 651
(D) at 655.
[9]
Breedenkamp
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2009
(5) SA 304
(GSI at 314G.
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