Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 94South Africa
K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 94 (25 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
25 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 94 (25 April 2023)
K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 94 (25 April 2023)
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sino date 25 April 2023
SAFLII
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
number: 3518/2023
In
the matter between:
K2021765242
(SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
THIBAULT
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First
respondent
ABRAHAMS
AND GROSS
Second
respondent
ATLANTIC
SEABOARD
PROPERTIES
(PTY)
LTD
Third
respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, CAPE TOWN
Fourth
respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 25 APRIL 2023
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
This matter concerns the alleged repudiation of a contract.
Only the first
respondent opposes the application, the remaining
respondents abiding the decision of the Court.
2.
The applicant applies for the rectification and specific performance
of an agreement
for the sale of immovable property ("the sale
agreement") which was concluded between the applicant, as
purchaser, and
the first respondent (“Thibault”), as
seller, on 5 October 2021.
3.
Thibault contends that the sale agreement has been terminated due to
the applicant's
repudiation thereof on 6 February 2023. The
alleged repudiation occurred by way of an email from one of the
applicant’s
directors, Mr Yousuf Karrim. If this issue is
determined in Thibault’s favour, the balance of the relief
sought falls
away.
4.
The applicant denies that it repudiated the sale agreement and thus
seeks specific
performance of the sale agreement. It alleges,
at the outset, that the “
First and/or Second Respondent are
not properly before Court, for reasons including inter alia the fact
that the Second Respondent
filed its Notice to abide, and the
Deponent's lack of authority
”.
5.
The second respondent is the conveyancer appointed to handle the
transfer process.
6.
The applicant advances four reasons for the denial of the alleged
repudiation:
6.1.
Firstly, the applicant contends that, objectively interpreted, the
email did not amount to a repudiation of the sale agreement. This is
so because the email does not evidence an intention to resile
from
the sale agreement as it was never Mr Karrim’s subjective
intention to do so.
6.2.
Secondly, the applicant contends that, even if Mr Karrim’s
conduct did amount to a repudiation, Thibault was required to put the
applicant to terms before being accepting the repudiation.
6.3.
Thirdly, the applicant contends that Mr Karrim never had the
authority
to repudiate the sale agreement on behalf of the applicant.
6.4.
Fourthly, the second respondent has acted wrongfully and has breached
its fiduciary duty owing to the applicant as purchaser under the sale
agreement.
Thibault’s
deponent’s alleged lack of authority
7.
The applicant states, by way of a point
in limine
, that
Thibault is not properly before the Court. This is because a
member of the second respondent firm deposed to the answering
affidavit on Thibault’s behalf, despite the second respondent
having given notice of its intention to abide the decision
of the
Court. The applicant effectively argues that it is the second
respondent, and not Thibault, that is opposing the application.
8.
The point has no
merit. The deponent to an affidavit need not be authorized by
the party concerned (in this case, Thibault)
to depose to the
affidavit. It is the institution (or opposition) and
prosecution of the application that should be authorized.
[1]
9.
If, further, the
applicant suspected that the second respondent had not been duly
instructed by Thibault in opposing this application,
then the
applicant should have employed the provisions of Rule 7 to challenge
the second respondent’s authority to act on
Thibault’s
behalf.
[2]
This it did not
do.
10.
In any event, the second respondent is described in the agreement of
sale as the “
seller’s attorneys/conveyancers
”.
There is no reason why the second respondent should not fulfil its
role as Thibault’s attorney of record in the present
application.
The
legal principles applicable to repudiation
11.
Whether repudiation has been established must be considered
objectively, in the context of what a reasonable
person would have
understood by the communication in question.
12.
In
Datacolor
International (Pty)
Ltd v
Intamarket (Pty) Ltd,
[3]
the Supreme Court
of Appeal explained the concept as follows:
“
[16] 'Where one
party to a contract, without lawful grounds,
indicates
to the other party in words or by conduct a deliberate and
unequivocal intention no longer to be bound by the contract,
he is
said to ''repudiate'' the contract. …. Where that happens, the
other party to the contract may elect to accept the
repudiation and
rescind the contract
. If he does so,
the contract comes to an end upon communication of his acceptance of
repudiation and rescission to the party who
has repudiated . . .'…
this Court has repeatedly stated that
the test for repudiation is not subjective but objective
…
Conceivably it could therefore
happen that one party, in truth intending to repudiate (as he later
confesses), expressed himself
so inconclusively that he is afterwards
held not to have done so; conversely, that his conduct may justify
the inference that he
did not propose to perform even though he can
afterwards demonstrate his good faith and his best intentions at the
time.
The emphasis is not on
the repudiating party's state of mind, on what he subjectively
intended, but on what someone in the
position of the innocent party
would think he intended to do; repudiation is accordingly not a
matter of intention, it is a matter
of perception. The perception is
that of a reasonable person placed in the position of the aggrieved
party.
The test is whether such a
notional reasonable person would conclude that proper performance (in
accordance with a true interpretation
of the agreement) will not be
forthcoming. The inferred intention accordingly serves as the
criterion for determining the nature
of the threatened actual breach.
[17] … As such
a repudiatory breach may be typified as an intimation by or on behalf
of the repudiating party, by word or
conduct and without lawful
excuse, that all or some of the obligations arising from the
agreement will not be performed according
to their true tenor.
Whether the innocent party will be entitled to resile from the
agreement will ultimately depend on the nature
and the degree of the
impending non- or malperformance.
[18] The
conduct
from which the inference of impending non- or malperformance is to be
drawn must be clearcut and unequivocal, ie not equally
consistent
with any other feasible hypothesis
.
Repudiation … is 'a serious matter' … requiring
anxious consideration and - because parties must be assumed
to be
predisposed to respect rather than to disregard their contractual
commitments - not lightly to be presumed.
[19] … the
approach is that
a court, faced with
the enquiry of whether a party's conduct amounted to a repudiation,
must superimpose its own assessment of what
the innocent party's
reaction to the guilty party's action should reasonably have been
.
[20] Consistent with
that approach it further follows that a court in making its
assessment must take into account all the
background material and
circumstances that should have weighed with the innocent party.”
[Emphasis added.]
13.
The onus lies on
the party who asserts repudiation to prove that the other party has
repudiated the contract.
[4]
14.
It is only when
the innocent party accepts the repudiation that the agreement is
cancelled. As cancellation is a juristic
act, the election to
cancel has to be communicated to the repudiating party: see
Stewart
Wrightson (Pty) Ltd v Thorpe:
[5]
“
Clearly, the
exercise of a right to terminate must, as a juristic act,
require an expression of intent
.”
15.
Until receipt of
notice of acceptance of the repudiation (which notice is sufficient
to serve as notice of cancellation) the repudiator
may retract his
repudiation.
[6]
16.
A forfeiture
clause or breach clause entitling the innocent party to cancel for
failure to perform after a specified period of notice
does not apply
to repudiation. The repudiating party is thus not entitled to
reprobate and approbate by claiming that such
clause permits the
retraction of the repudiation until notice of default is given and
the period in question expires.
[7]
17.
The question to be determined in the present matter is therefore
whether the 6 February 2023 email would
lead a reasonable person to
conclude that the applicant no longer intended to proceed with the
sale agreement.
Did
the email of 6 February 2023 constitute a repudiation of the sale
agreement?
18.
On 6 February 2023 Mr Karrim sent an email in the following terms to
the second respondent (as mentioned,
the conveyancer handling the
process of registration of transfer) as well as to various other
persons, including representatives
of Thibault:
"
Hi All,
Please note that the
last straw was drawn this morning and I don't have the patience for
these inconsistencies and incorrect information
being provided.
Please note that I
have contact Investec to start the cancellation process.
@ Nicholas Hayes,
please
refund all fees, Deposits and
transfer costs
paid
to the
below
bank
account:
@ Albertus Erasmus,
please do the same:
Account Holder: Mr
Yousuf Karrim Account number: […] Bank: INVESTEC BANK LTD
Branch: INVESTEC BANK
GRAYSTON DRIVE SWIFT/BIC code:[…]
Branch
code: […]
Thanks.
"
19.
Mr Karrim confirms in the email that he contacted Investec to
commence the process to cancel the approval
of guarantees. He demands
a full refund of all fees, deposits and transfer costs paid to the
conveyancing attorneys and to Anuva
Investments (Pty) Ltd ("Anuva"),
a party involved in the structuring of the transaction.
20.
Thibault
alleges that such conduct is only reconcilable with an intention not
to proceed with the sale agreement. Whilst Mr
Karrim disputes
that his email is open to such an interpretation he does not offer
any other possibility, save to say that it evidenced
his frustration
in the delay in the transfer process and that he did not intend it to
be a true cancellation. As indicated
earlier, however, Mr
Karrim’s subjective intention is not relevant:
[8]
"
Om
'n ooreenkoms te repudieer, hoef daar nie ... 'n subjektiewe
bedoeling te wees om 'n einde aan die ooreenkoms te maak nie. Waar
'n
party, bv, weier om 'n belangrike bepaling van 'n ooreenkoms na te
kom, sou sy optrede regtens op 'n repudiering van die
ooreenkoms kon
neerkom, al sou hy ook meen dat hy sy verpligtinge behoorlik nakom
."
[I translate: “To repudiate a contract there need not be
a subjective intention to terminate the contract.
Where a
party, for example, refuses to perform a material term of a contract,
his conduct could legally amount to a repudiation,
even if he thought
that he was properly performing his obligations”.]
21.
Nevertheless, Thibault says, Mr Karrim's intention to put an end to
the agreement also appears from
an email sent later that same day in
which he takes issue with the applicant’s proposed liability
for wasted costs:
"
Nicholas, I
cannot accept this. Due to you and your company delaying the process
you should be held liable for all the costs. The
only reason for
cancelation is because you have not done your job. It
is
not
5
months and still no transfer or movement on
transfer. Please note that you will refund all
costs!!! …
Please do what you must this will be taken further and I will get all
my funds.
"
22.
Thibault accordingly argues that, to the extent that it is relevant,
it is not correct to state, as
Mr Karrim does, that he never intended
to resile from the sale agreement.
23.
As indicated earlier, the applicant argues that the email was simply
an expression of Mr Karrim’s
frustration with the process.
This might have been the motive for the email, but that is not the
only way in which the wording
can be understood. The motive for
Mr Karrim's email is irrelevant. It is clear from the email,
considered objectively,
that the applicant did not intend to proceed
with the sale agreement and that it sought to cancel same. It
indicated that it had
given instructions for the revocation of the
guarantees. This amounts to an unequivocal expression of an
intention to not
proceed with the sale agreement and constitutes
repudiation.
Was
Thibault obliged to put the applicant to terms?
24.
The second basis of the applicant’s denial of repudiation is
that Thibault was required, after
the repudiation of the sale
agreement (assuming that Mr Karrim’s email constituted a
repudiation), to put the applicant to
terms in terms of the breach
clause contained in the sale agreement. As the applicant puts
it: “…
the Agreement did not provide for
unilateral cancellation,
or termination for convenience, and
thus, same was plainly not possible…
” and “
as
provided for in terms of clause 16.1.3. of the Agreement, the First
Respondent ought to have given the Applicant 48 hours Notice
to
remedy the breach (inter alia of clause 4.6 - i.e. purported
withdrawal of the
guarantees)”.
This breach, so the
applicant contends, went to the root of the agreement. For that
reason, the applicant argues, Thibault
was required to give the
applicant 48 hours to remedy the alleged breach.
25.
The applicant
argues that, had Thibault done
so,
it would have
found that the guarantees were in fact never
withdrawn.
Thibault, however, failed to” take care” by placing the
applicant on terms and cancelling the agreement
correctly, which in
itself amounted to a repudiation of the agreement, not accepted by
the applicant. The applicant's breach
was capable of being
remedied. The applicant refers to
Belet
Cellular v MTN Service Provider
[9]
in support of
these contentions. In that case, however, the Supreme Court of
Appeal agreed with the High Court that the party
(Belet) accused of
repudiation had in fact not repudiated, and therefore it held that,
if Belet had committed an ordinary breach
of the agreement, such
breach should have been dealt with in terms of the relevant breach
clause in the agreement.
Belet
therefore does not
support the applicant’s argument.
26.
Lastly, the applicant submits that one party's repudiation does not
provide the innocent party with
an open window to cease total
compliance of its contractual obligations.
27.
I agree with
the submission by counsel for Thibault that these propositions are
not correct in
law.
Repudiation is an anticipatory breach of contract, and not an actual
breach contemplated in the agreement. As mentioned
earlier,
Vromolimnos
supra
confirmed
that a “
repudiator
is not entitled to be given an opportunity to retract his repudiation
before it
is
accepted by
the
innocent party and he cannot rely,
as in
this case, on
the provisions of a
general
forfeiture clause in the contract. He is not entitled to reprobate
and
approbate.
"
[10]
28.
In
Taggart
v Green
[11]
the position was
stated as follows:
“
After
referring to certain authority, the magistrate said that the
defendant could not 'have it both ways, ie repudiating the contract,
but at the same time holding the other party bound by the rules
prescribed by the repudiated contract'. I agree. It would be an
exercise in futility and delay to expect the plaintiff to go through
the procedure of telling the defendant of the details of his
breach,
and calling upon him to right his ways, failing which a cancellation
would follow. … It is clear that in our law
repudiation is
looked at objectively… and when faced by a clear repudiation,
the party not in breach is entitled as of right
to bring the contract
to an end without more delay. Moreover the law is clear that in a
case such as the present a party cannot,
as the magistrate put it,
have it both ways. As Nicholas AJA succinctly said in Culverwell
and Another v Brown
1990
(1) SA 7
(A)
at
17B-C:
'Plainly,
where a party elects to terminate the contract (upon the other
party's repudiation), he cannot thereafter change his mind:
the contract is gone.'
”
29.
It follows that the applicant’s argument in this respect is
without merit. For this reason,
too, the applicant’s
reliance on the
contra proferentem
rule is misplaced.
Mr
Karrim’s authority to act on behalf of the applicant
30.
The applicant contends, thirdly, that Mr Karrim’s repudiation
should not be imputed to the applicant
because he was not authorised
to repudiate.
31.
It is trite that a juristic person acts through its directors. It is
common cause that Mr Karrim is
one of the two directors of the
applicant. He was the duly authorized contact person in all
correspondence between the conveyancers,
Thibault and the applicant,
and also signed the sale agreement on behalf of the applicant.
32.
The sale agreement, in fact, contains a resolution by the applicant
in the following terms:
"
We
the undersigned, being all the directors of the Company hereby pass
the following resolutions and
agree that
the said
resolutions shall
for
all
purposes be as
valid
and
effective
as
if
the
same
had
been
passed
at
a
meeting
of
the
directors of the
Company
duly
convened and
held.
NOTE
that:
In regard to the
purchase of 2 units, 2015 and 2016 at One Thibault Square in Cape
Town CBD,
allow and give full
permission for Yousuf Karrim
with ID
number: 8404285193088
to act on
behalf of and make decisions on
behalf of the Company
."
and
"It is hereby
RESOLVED that:
1.
Yousuf Karrim is
hereby APPROVED
to
act
on
behalf
of
the
company
.
2.
Yousuf Karrim in his respective capacity as a director of
the Company or, failing
them,
any
director
of
the
Company for
the
time
being,
be
and
is
hereby authorised to negotiate,
settle, execute and amend on behalf of the Company, all
such
documents, deeds, Instruments and
agreements, or any
amendment thereto, and
generally to do all such things
necessary, appropriate or
desirable to
give
effect
to
aforementioned
resolutions
.”
[Emphasis added.]
33.
The applicant argues that “
such cancellation/termination
[was not] within the contemplation of the relevant Resolution
”,
for the following reasons:
33.1.
Firstly, the resolution refers to the "
purchase
” of
the property in question. Thus, the objective of the applicant and
the purpose of the resolution were to enable Mr Karrim
to purchase
the property only, and not to resile from the agreement and "lose"
the property. Mr Karrim was only ever
authorised to "
negotiate,
settle, execute and amend on behalf of the Company, all such
documents, deeds, instruments and
agreements, or
any
amendments thereto,
and
generally to do all such
things necessary, appropriate or desirable to give effect to
abovementioned resolutions
", that is, for the purchase of
the units. Mr. Karrim's email of 6 February 2023 is completely
contradictory to what
was contemplated by the resolution.
33.2.
Secondly, in the absence of a clause in the agreement that would
allow for and permit
unilateral cancellation or termination for
convenience, a further resolution by the applicant would be required
for such “unilateral
repudiation” to be binding.
34.
On the facts, however, it is clear that Mr Karrim was authorised to
act on behalf of the applicant in
all of its dealings with Thibault
in relation to the properties. The wording of the resolution is wide
enough to encompass every
aspect of the transaction. In other words,
the applicant left the transaction, as a whole, in the hands of its
director, Mr Karrim.
He was the face of the applicant
throughout the transaction, from signature of the agreement in 2021
to his email correspondence
in February 2023. Mr Karrim's
email of 6 February 2023 would therefore reasonably have been
regarded by Thibault as
having been authorized by the applicant, and
not as a frolic of his (Mr Karrim’s) own. In the
circumstances, the email
evidences an unequivocal intention on the
part of the applicant not to proceed with the sale agreement, and
constitutes a repudiation
by the applicant.
35.
The impugned emails, as well as the follow-up emails between the
parties, were copied to Mr Karrim’s
business partner and
co-director of the applicant, namely Mr Van der Westhuizen. The
latter was fully aware of Mr Karrim’s
communications and how
the situation unfolded. The repudiation was not retracted prior
to Thibault’s acceptance thereof.
36.
This repudiation was accepted on behalf of Thibault later that same
day and, as a result, the sale agreement
was terminated. A
clause in the agreement authorizing a “unilateral cancellation”
would not be applicable to
the situation for the same reason as to
why a breach clause is not applicable.
The
second respondent’s role
37.
The applicant
refers to the fact that an alleged repudiation must be interpreted in
a just and
reasonable
manner,
[12]
taking into
consideration, amongst other factors, the nature of the agreement,
the parties thereto, the circumstances surrounding
the alleged
repudiation, and the prejudice to be suffered by the
applicant.
For that reason, the second respondent’s role in the dispute
should be scrutinised.
38.
The applicant argues that the second respondent acted wrongfully and
in breach of its fiduciary duty
to the applicant as purchaser.
It argues that, having regard to the objective test to be applied,
the second respondent and
its representatives cannot be considered
ordinary "reasonable persons", inasmuch as they are
qualified attorneys and
conveyancers, obliged to act with a certain
degree of care, skill and knowledge. The applicant argues that the
first and second
respondents' conduct is opportunistic and both
entities should not be permitted to profit from the situation.
39.
A conveyancer has
a duty to protect the rights of the both the seller and purchaser in
the conveyancing process.
[13]
As a result, the applicant submits that the second respondent acted
recklessly and unreasonably in the circumstances, and
failed to
protect the rights enjoyed by the applicant. The second respondent
breached its fiduciary duty and acted unlawfully in
doing
so.
40.
Mr Karrim's frustrations were caused, so the applicant argues, as a
result of the failure of the second
respondent’s
representatives to carry out their duty with the requisite level of
competence, resulting in delays and misinformation
in the course of
the transfer process. Consequently, the second respondent failed both
parties, inasmuch as the second respondent
failed to:
40.1.
test the alleged repudiation by making further enquiries and
verifying certain details;
40.2.
not lightly presume that the applicant no longer considered itself
bound by the agreement
or that it would not perform in terms thereof,
by virtue of Mr Karrim’s words;
40.3.
have a full grasp and proper understanding of the agreement;
40.4.
advise the applicant of the consequences of Mr Karrim's conduct;
40.5.
advise Mr Karrim or the applicant to seek independent legal advice;
40.6.
inform Thibault of the consequences of purporting to accept the
alleged repudiation, in
haste, without first having followed the
procedure for cancellation of the agreement as set out in the breach
clause.
41.
I have indicated
that Mr Karrim’s motives for sending the email are
irrelevant.
[14]
I have
also pointed out that the applicant’s last point (cancellation
in terms of the agreement) has no merit because
of the nature of
repudiation.
42.
There is no evidence supporting the notion that the second respondent
did not understand the agreement.
43.
The wording of Mr
Karrim’s emails was clear: The email sent on the morning
of 6 February 2023 indicated Mr Karrim had
contacted Investec already
to start the process for the cancellation of the guarantees. He
demanded immediate repayment of
the deposit and other costs paid
pursuant to the conclusion of the agreement. He reiterated
later in the day that the agreement
was “
canceled
”
and that the
applicant would not take responsibility for any wasted costs. In
my view, this exhibits a deliberate and
unequivocal intention no
longer to be bound by the agreement.
[15]
44.
The applicant’s argument does not distinguish between the
second respondent and Thibault. The
second respondent is not
the seller of the property, and it is unclear how it would “profit”
from the repudiation.
(In fact, there is no evidence as to how
Thibault stands to profit from the repudiation, given that it has now
lost the sale.)
Mr Karrim sent his email of 6 February 2023 not
only to the second respondent, but also to representatives of
Thibault, as
well as to his co-director. He did so in his
capacity as the director authorized to deal with the transaction on
the applicant’s
behalf.
45.
The second respondent had a duty to convey Mr Karrim’s messages
to Thibault. It was not
the second respondent that accepted the
repudiation – Thibault did so. This is clear from the
email sent later the
same day from the second respondent to Mr Karrim
(copying in Thibault’s representatives and the applicant’s
co-director),
to the effect that Thibault has given the second
respondent instructions to accept the repudiation. In other
words, the second
respondent conveyed Thibault’s acceptance of
the repudiation to the applicant.
46.
The second
respondent’s conduct in dealing with the transfer and
Thibault’s acceptance of the repudiation are two different
matters. If the applicant is dissatisfied with the manner in
which the second respondent conducted itself, it has other remedies
at its disposal to pursue the matter. The applicant relies an
excerpt from
Platinum
Property Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v McShane and another
[16]
as an example as to how the conveyancer should have warned the
applicant of the consequences of Mr Karrim’s conduct.
In
that matter, however, the innocent party, the purchaser, did not
accept the seller’s repudiation and the agreement was
therefore
not cancelled. It was in that context that the correspondence
referred to in the extract relied upon was exchanged.
Conclusion
47.
In the circumstances, I am of the view that Mr Karrim’s email
constituted a repudiation of the
sale agreement by the applicant.
The repudiation was accepted by Thibault, and the sale agreement was
accordingly cancelled.
Thibault has discharged its onus in this
regard.
48.
It follows that the relief sought in the notice of motion is
incompetent as it seeks to enforce a terminated
agreement.
Costs
49.
No reason has been advanced why the general rule in relation to costs
should not be followed.
Order
50.
In the premises,
the application is dismissed, with costs
.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
Appearances
:
For
the applicant
:
C. S.
Barclay-Beuthin,
Instructed by
Dirk
Kotze Inc.
For
the first respondent
:
P-S
Bothma,
Instructed
by
Abrahams
& Gross Inc.
[1]
Ganes
v Telecom Namibia Ltd
[2004] 2 All SA 609
(SCA) at para [19].
[2]
Ganes
ibid
.
[3]
2001(2)
SA 284 (SCA) at paras [16]-[19]. See also
Tuckers
Land and Development Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Hovis
1980
(1) SA 645
(A) at 653F: "
The
question is therefore: has the appellant acted in such a way as to
lead a reasonable person to the conclusion that he does
not intend
to fulfil his part of the contract?
"
[4]
Schlinkmann
v Van der Walt
1947 (2) SA 900
(E) at 919.
[5]
1977
(2) SA 943 (A)
at
954A.
[6]
Vromolimnos
(Pty) Ltd and another v Weichbold and another
1991 (2) SA 157
(C) at 162F-G.
[7]
Vromolimnos
(Pty) Ltd and another v Weichbold and another supra
at
163C-D.
[8]
Van
Rooyen v
Minister
van Openbare Werke en
Gemeenskapsbou
1978
(2) SA 835
(A) at 845H-846B.
[9]
[2020] ZASCA
07
(15 January 2021) at paras [33] and [34].
[10]
See also
Discovery
Life Ltd v Hogan and another
2021
(5) SA 466
(SCA) at paras [16].
[11]
1991
(4) SA 1212
(W) at 125E-J.
[12]
Re
Rubel
Bronze
and Metal Co and Vos
(1918]
1 KB at p 3222.
[13]
Bruwer
and another v Pocock
&
Bailey
lngelyf and another
[2009]
ZAWCHC 167
(23 September 2009) at para [18].
[14]
See
Discovery
Life Ltd v Hogan supra
at
para [17].
[15]
See
BP
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mahmood Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2010] All SA 295
(SCA)
at para [32].
[16]
[2022] ZAWCHC 261
(19
December 2022) at para [6].
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