Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 151South Africa
Pienaar Brothers Proprietary Limited v Brian Pienaar North Proprietary Limited and Others (21220/21) [2023] ZAWCHC 151 (20 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
20 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Pienaar Brothers Proprietary Limited v Brian Pienaar North Proprietary Limited and Others (21220/21) [2023] ZAWCHC 151 (20 June 2023)
Pienaar Brothers Proprietary Limited v Brian Pienaar North Proprietary Limited and Others (21220/21) [2023] ZAWCHC 151 (20 June 2023)
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sino date 20 June 2023
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IN
THE HIGH OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO.: 21220/21
In
the matter between:
PIENAAR
BROTHERS
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
Applicant
And
BRIAN
PIENAAR NORTH PROPRIETARY LIMITED
First
Respondent
BASI
PIENAAR BROS PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Second
Respondent
BRIAN
PIENAAR PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Third
Respondent
NKOSAZANA
PIENAAR BROS PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Fourth
Respondent
ZAHARA
PIENAAR BROS NORTH PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Fifth
Respondent
BRIAN
VICTOR LAPINER (formerly PIENAAR)
Sixth
Respondent
(Identity
Number: 5[…])
REGISTRAR
OF TRADE MARKS
Seventh
Respondent
.ZA
CENTRAL REGISTRY
NPC
Eighth
Respondent
THE
COMMISSIONER
OF THE COMPANIES
Ninth
Respondent
AND
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY COMMISSION
RHINO
SAFETY MANUFACTURING
(PTY) LTD
Tenth
Respondent
(formally
PIENAAR BROS FRANCHISING (PTY) LTD)
Date
of
Judgment: This
judgment was
handed
down
electronically
by
circulation to
the
parties' legal representatives by email on 20 JUNE 2023.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
FRANCIS,
J
[1] This
matter concerns opposed applications brought by Pienaar Brothers
Proprietary Limited
(the "applicant" or "Pienaar
Brothers") who seeks leave to amend its notice of motion and
introduce a supplementary
founding affidavit ("the interlocutory
applications"), and an application in terms of rule 30 of the
Uniform Rules of
Court brought by the first to sixth respondents
(collectively referred to as "the respondents") in which
they challenge
the enrolment of the main application for hearing as
being premature and irregular.
[2]
Although the interlocutory applications have their own legal
requirements, they are inextricably
linked as the basis for the
amendment sought is explained in the supplementary affidavit which
the applicant seeks to have admitted
as evidence in these
proceedings. In this judgment, I will first consider the
interlocutory applications jointly and thereafter
the rule 30
application.
# THE INTERLOCUTORY
APPLICATIONS
THE INTERLOCUTORY
APPLICATIONS
## Relevant background facts
Relevant background facts
[3]
Since 1961, the applicant and its predecessors have operated a
business supplying and distributing
personal protective clothing and
equipment ("PPE") for use in various industries in South
Africa under the trade names
"Pienaar
Bros" and
"Pienaar Brothers".
The applicant trades
predominantly in the Western Cape (including certain areas in the
Southern Cape and the West Coast), the Eastern
Cape, Durban, and the
area south of Durban in KwaZulu Natal (collectively referred to
as "the southern territory").
It also has operations and
customers in the Northern Cape, Namibia, and Angola.
[4]
As a result of several decades of trading, the "Pienaar
Brothers" and "Pienaar
Bros" trade names have
developed a public reputation in the PPE market.
[5]
The sixth respondent, Brian Victor Lapiner (formally Pienaar) ("Mr
Lapiner"),
was an employee of the applicant in or about 1983 and
became a director in or about 1985. Thereafter, he decided to move to
Johannesburg
with a view to extending the family business and formed
Brian Pienaar Proprietary Limited ("the third respondent"
or
"Brian Pienaar") for this purpose and commenced trading
in Wadesville, Germiston, in 1988. The "family business"
referred to was the applicant's predecessor.
[6]
Brian Pienaar traded in PPE from 1988 to 1999. Thereafter, it became
a holding company with
controlling interests in various trading
companies, with the first respondent, Brian Pienaar North Proprietary
Limited ("Pienaar
North"), being the main trading company
of what the parties refer to as the "Pienaar North group".
The group's operations
have historically been confined to the
northern region of the country ("the northern territory").
[7]
The second respondent, Basi Pienaar Bros Proprietary Limited, is a
franchisee of the tenth
respondent, Rhino Safety Manufacturing (Pty)
Ltd (formally the Pienaar Bros Franchising (Pty) Ltd). The second
respondent provides
a complete range of the Pienaar North group's PPE
products and is obliged in terms of its franchise agreement to
utilise the trademarks
registered by the Pienaar North group.
[8]
The fourth and fifth respondents, like the second respondent, are
existing franchisees of
the tenth respondent and are authorised (and
obliged) to use the Pienaar North group's trademarks in the course of
their trade.
[9]
The nature of the relationship between the applicant and the
respondents is in dispute.
[10]
The applicant's case, as set out in the founding affidavit in the
main application, is that an agreement
was concluded between its
predecessor and Pienaar North from 1988 ("the 1988 agreement")
in terms of which consent was
given to Pienaar North to use the
"Pienaar Brother" and "Pienaar Bros" trade names.
In terms of the 1988 agreement,
the applicant and the nascent Pienaar
North business would operate and be maintained as distinct
businesses. The applicant would
continue to trade and would build up
a business in the areas where it already traded - the southern
territory - while the Pienaar
North business would trade in areas
where the applicant did not trade, that is, in the northern
territory. Appropriate measures
would be adopted by Mr Lapiner to
distinguish his new business from that of the applicant to avoid
confusion in the market. In
this regard, Pienaar North would insert
the word "North" in its branding and marketing to
distinguish its business from
that of the applicant.
[11]
In essence, the applicant alleges that the first respondent breached
the agreement
by expanding outside of the agreed territory and
failing to use the distinguishing term "North" in all or
some of its
branding. In addition, the first and third respondents
applied for and obtained registration of the Pienaar Bros logo and
Pienaar
Bros word marks, and permitted entities such as the second,
fourth and fifth respondents to use the Piernaar Bros trading names
and styles without the applicant's authority.
[12]
The relief sought by the applicant (at least in prayers 1 to 3) was
to enforce
the terms of the 1988 agreement by way of interdicts
against the first respondent and to the extent necessary, the third
respondent.
The applicant also sought an order for transfer of the
domain name pienaarbros.co.za to the applicant (prayer 4), an order
for
cancellation of trade mark applications filed by the first and
third respondents (prayer 5), interdicts against the second
respondent
in relation to use of the Pienaar Bros trademarks, trading
getup and styles, and the alleged passing off (prayers 6 and 7), an
order declaring the sixth respondent a delinquent director and his
removal as a director of the applicant (prayer 8), and an order
declaring that the company names of the fourth and fifth respondents
are contrary to section 11 of the Companies Act (prayers 9
and 10).
[13]
Mr Lapiner deposed to an extensive answering affidavit on behalf of
the respondents
in which he refuted the form and content of the 1988
agreement as described by the applicant. He noted that the deponent
to the
founding affidavit had confused the first and third
respondents. He pointed out that he had commenced business with the
third respondent
and that the first respondent was only established
in 1999 due to a corporate restructure. Mr Lapiner denied that there
was any
trademark licence agreement in place and averred that there
was instead a
"co-existence agreement”
in
place from 1988 and that a
"territorial restraint agreement”
was entered into in the early 1990's.
[14]
According to the respondents: (i) the co-existence agreement was
simply that
the business in the north (however constituted) would
trade as Pienaar Brothers; (ii) the consent extended to subsidiaries
of Brian
Pienaar, and included the right to confer licences on others
to use the name for the ultimate benefit of Brian Pienaar and its
subsidiaries; and (iii) the two businesses (the applicant and the
Pienaar North group) have co-existed for more than 30 years and
have
used the same trading name over that period.
[15]
Mr Lapiner stated that the concept of goodwill or
reputation in
the trading name "Pienaar Bros" was not
discussed between the parties. His understanding was that the effect
of the co-existence
agreement was that the reputation in the trading
name "Pienaar Brothers" and "Pienaar Bros" is
shared (indivisibly)
between them and that, as a result, neither
party can now lay claim exclusively to the reputation in the name,
which is what the
applicant seeks to do by way of the main
application.
[16]
There were also no conditions attached to the Pienaar North group's
use of
the trading name because everyone involved stood to benefit
from the use of that name and were therefore content for the two
business
to co-exist, wherever they traded. [It must be mentioned
that it is not in dispute that there were, and continues to be,
cross-shareholdings
and/or directorships in the applicant and the
Pienaar North group of companies]. Finally, according to Mr Lapiner,
there was never
any agreement that the third respondent (and now the
Pienaar North group) was required to use the word "North"
as part
of its trading name to distinguish its products and services
from that of the applicant. Mr Lapiner, of his own accord, decided
to
add a geographic element to the Pienaar Brothers trade name but did
so only to indicate the geographic region in which the Pienaar
North
group was operating.
[17]
The respondents agree that there was a territorial restraint
agreement between
the parties which was, in effect, the 1988
agreement. However, according to Mr Lapiner, Brian Pienaar was
already trading as "Pienaar
Bros" (under the terms of the
co-existence agreement) when the territorial restraint agreement was
concluded.
[18]
The applicant filed a replying affidavit in which it disputed the
characterisation
of the 1998 agreement as merely a territorial
restraint agreement in terms of which each party agreed to operate in
certain geographical
areas. According to the applicant, the 1998
agreement was in fact a trademark license agreement which permitted
Pienaar North to
use the "Pienaar Brothers" and "Pienaar
Bros" trademarks. In its replying affidavit, and the
supplementary
founding affidavit it seeks to have admitted, the
applicant stated that it considered the respondents' version as set
out in the
answering affidavit to involve a clear repudiation of any
agreement(s) in terms of which the Pienaar North group had consent
(expressly
or tacitly) to use the Pienaar Bros trademarks. According
to the applicant, the content of the answering affidavit also
demonstrated
that the first and the third respondents acted in a
manner that was completely inimical to a trademark licence agreement.
[19]
The applicant submitted that the conduct which constituted a
repudiation includes:
(i) the first and third respondents, without
the applicant's knowledge, claiming proprietary rights in the Pienaar
Bros trademarks
and clandestinely filing trade mark applications and
obtaining registration in respect of them; (ii) the Pienaar North
group, by
their own admission, encroaching on the trading territory
of Pienaar Brothers; (iii) the first and third respondents filing
marker
and leniency applications with the Competition Commission
setting out a version of the relationship with the applicant which is
at odds with the 1988 agreement that has been in place for decades;
and (iv) the establishment of the tenth respondent as franchisor,
and
permitting that company to conclude agreements with franchisees (such
as the second, fourth and fifth respondents), in terms
of which it
claims ownership of, or that it is licensed to use, the Pienaar
Brothers or Pienaar Bros trademarks - the tenth respondent
was joined
in the main application pursuant to an order granted on 14 October
2022.
[20]
The applicant argued that repudiation makes it impossible, and
untenable, for
it to continue with any contractual relationship in
place in terms of which the Pienaar North group would continue using
the Pienaar
Brothers' trademarks (on either the applicant's or the
respondents' versions of the agreement(s)). It, accordingly, decided
to
accept the repudiation of any such agreement(s) (which would
include the 1988 agreement on the applicant's version and/or the "co
existence agreement”
and
"territorial
restraint agreement”,
on the respondents' version) and
notified the respondents of its election to do so and its
cancellation of the agreement(s).
[21]
As a result of the cancellation of the agreement(s), the applicant
seeks leave
to amend its notice of motion by deleting any prayer in
the notice of motion requiring relief to enforce the 1988 agreement,
adding
new prayers for relief consequent upon the cancellation of the
agreement(s), and the re-numbering of paragraphs in the notice of
motion. The amendments sought to the notice of motion are as follows:
[21.1]
The insertion of a new prayer 1 for an order declaring that the
conduct of the Pienaar
North group constitutes a repudiation of the
1988 agreement, or any agreements found to have been in place between
the parties,
and that the agreement(s) have been validly cancelled.
In this regard, the applicant maintains that the agreement which was
concluded
was the 1988 agreement described in the founding affidavit
and that this is the agreement that falls to be cancelled but argues
that even if the respondents' version of two separate agreements is
accepted, the outcome would be the same.
[21.2]
Not persisting with the orders in prayers 1, 3 and 6 of the notice of
motion;
[21.3]
Amending prayer 2 to provide that the first, second, third, fourth,
fifth and tenth respondents
(and not merely the first and third
respondents) be interdicted and restrained from using the trading
names "Pienaar Brothers"
or "Pienaar Bros", or
any confusingly or deceptively similar names or trademarks, anywhere
in South Africa. It was stated
in the founding affidavit that it was
not clear whether the fourth and fifth respondents were trading (and
thus whether interdictory
relief was required to be sought against
them). The applicant submitted, however, that it became apparent from
the respondents'
answering papers that these entities are
"franchisees", and so it is necessary to obtain
interdictory relief against
them as well. In addition, the tenth
respondent has now been joined and the interdictory and ancillary
relief based on passing
off is also sought against it.
[21.4]
Inserting a new prayer 3 that introduces an additional order for the
delivery up or destruction
of all and any materials in the possession
of the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and tenth respondents
which bear the Pienaar
Brothers' trademarks or any other names or
trademarks confusingly or deceptively similar thereto.
[21.5]
Renumbering prayer 4 as prayer 5;
[21.6]
Inserting a new prayer 4 that introduces an additional order for an
enquiry into the
amount of any damages, or a reasonable royalty, as a
result of the unauthorised use by the first, second, third, fourth,
fifth
and tenth respondents of the applicant's trademarks.
[21.7]
Renumbering prayer 5 as prayer 6.
[21.8]
Amending prayer 7 to extend the interdict in relation to the alleged
passing off to include
not only the second respondent but also the
first, third, fourth, fifth and tenth respondents.
[21.9]
Amending prayer 8 relating to the removal of Mr Lapiner as a director
of the applicant
with an order that the ninth respondent impose a ban
on him from holding any directorship position for a period of 7 years
from
the date of the order. According to the applicant, this
amendment is occasioned by the fact that Mr Lapiner resigned as
director
of the applicant on 6 April 2022, being the same day he
signed the answering affidavit. Therefore, it was no longer necessary
for
the applicant to seek an order directing the ninth respondent to
remove him as a director of the applicant, as the old prayer 8
did.
The applicant still, however, persists in its request that he be
declared a delinquent director.
[21.10]
Amending prayers 9 and 10 to extend the ambit of the orders sought
prohibiting the use of the word
"Pienaar Bros" in the names
of not only the fourth and fifth respondents but the second
respondent as well.
[21.11]
Amending prayer 11 by including an order for costs against the tenth
respondent in addition to the
first, second, third, fourth, and fifth
respondents.
[22]
The applicant has set out the amendments it seeks in its replying
affidavit
and explained that it considered it necessary and
appropriate to also file a supplementary founding affidavit to
canvass these
issues, as opposed to simply dealing with the matter in
reply. The applicant's supplementary founding affidavit provides the
respondents
with an opportunity of dealing comprehensively with the
new allegations in a supplementary answering affidavit (should it
choose
to do so), and also allows the applicant to file a replying
affidavit in response to any new matter that may be raised therein,
if necessary.
[23]
The respondents filed an extensive opposing affidavit in which it was
submitted,
and argued, that if the amendment application was granted
and the supplementary founding affidavit allowed, it would bring
about
a fundamental change in the nature of the case that the
respondents are called upon to meet. They argued that the
applications
ought to be dismissed because their grant will occasion
considerable prejudice to the respondents for at least the following
four
reasons:
[23.1] First, the
applicant seeks to introduce a new cause of action not foreshadowed
in the founding papers;
[23.2]
Second, the applicant seeks to introduce a new factual basis for the
new relief sought, in the form of a new
version as to nature of the
contractual relationship between the parties. The new version is
irreconcilable with the facts advanced
in the founding affidavit and
in circumstances where the facts stated in the founding affidavit
have not been retracted or corrected;
[23.3] Third,
the supplementary founding affidavit is excipiable on account of the
fact that (i) the applicant fails
to plead the terms of the agreement
upon which it relies for its new cause of action (repudiation of
"any" agreement
between the parties) with the requisite
clarity; and (ii) no case has been made out for repudiation of the
"trade mark licence"
introduced for the first time in the
supplementary founding affidavit.
[23.4] Finally, it
was submitted that the application was made in bad faith. Most of the
facts relied upon by the applicant
in support of its new case for
repudiation were known to it before it launched the main application.
Therefore, the applicant's
explanation for seeking to introduce them
now, and change its case, is contrived.
[24]
In support of its submission that the applicant seeks to
impermissibly introduce a new cause of action based
on irreconcilable
versions of fact in the founding affidavit and the supplementary
founding affidavit, the respondents submit that:
[24.1]
The applicant's case previously concerned an alleged breach of the
1988 agreement by the first respondent
arising as a result of
encroachment into the applicant's territories and its failure to use
the distinguishing term "North".
The applicant's case for
passing off was limited to a claim that the first and second
respondents were passing off their business
as that of the applicant
because they were operating outside of the scope of the 1988
agreement.
[24.2]
If the amendment and supplementation is permitted, the applicant's
case will be concerned
with an alleged repudiation and cancellation
of a purported trademark licence granted to the Pienaar North group
which was not
pleaded in the founding affidavit and does not, and
cannot, exist on the facts pleaded in the founding affidavit.
[24.3]
The applicant's assertion in its founding affidavit that one of
material terms of the 1988 agreement
was the undertaking provided by
the Pienaaar North group to use the distinguishing term "North"
in its marketing and
branding, is wholly inconsistent and
irreconcilable with a trademark licensing arrangement. The respondent
argued that trademark
law and the law of passing off serves only to
protect a trade mark proprietor (and permits the grant of
interdictory relief) against
the use of a mark by a respondent that
is so similar to the registered trade mark as to give rise to
confusion or deception. The
Pienaar North group does not require a
licence to use a trademark which does not cause confusion in the
relevant trade.
[24.4]
The respondents argue that for so long as the founding affidavit
serves before this Court, those
are the facts to which the
respondents must respond and which this Court must have regard to.
The difficulty for the respondents
is that they do not know what case
they are being called upon to answer: how do they reconcile an
allegation, in the founding affidavit,
that a material term of the
1988 agreement was that Pienaar North group was required to adopt
measures to avoid confusion and use
a distinguishing trade mark (and
thus a version of the agreement which is the very antithesis of a
trade mark licence) with the
allegation, in the supplementary
founding affidavit, that the 1988 agreement is a trade mark licence?
[25]
The applicant's response was that the 1988 agreement is a trademark
license
agreement. According to the applicant, a trademark license is
no more than permission to use a trademark. Mr Lapiner admitted that
he was given consent to use the Pienaar Bros trademarks and thus can
never claim
bona fide
proprietorship or common law rights in
the trademark. The 1988 agreement was not a co-existence agreement
but a licence to use the
Pienaar Brothers trademarks. All goodwill
arising from the use of the mark by the Pienaar North group inures to
the benefit of
the applicant. The applicant also disputed that a
distinguishing mark is antithetical to a trademark licence.
[26]
Before
considering the arguments and submissions of the parties, it is
necessary
to
briefly
outline
the
relevant
legal
principles
applicable
to
the
interlocutory applications
[1]
.
[27]
The
ordinary rule (or default position) is that three sets of affidavits
are allowed, namely: founding affidavits, answering affidavits,
and
replying affidavits. The court, however, has a discretion in terms of
rule 6(5)(e)
of the
Uniform Rules to permit the filing of further affidavits in certain
instances. Whilst a court is guided by the principle
that the parties
should be permitted to have the case adjudicated
on the full
facts, the court
will only
exercise
its
discretion
to permit a
further set of affidavits in exceptional circumstances
[2]
,
special
circumstances
[3]
, or if a court
considers it advisable
[4]
.
It is
essentially a question of fairness to both sides as to whether or not
further sets of affidavits should be allowed.
[5]
[28]
In
exercising its discretion, the court will consider factors such as
the
reason why
the evidence was not produced timeously, the degree of materiality of
the evidence, the possibility that the further
affidavit may have
been shaped to cure a material defect in the papers, the balance of
prejudice to the applicant if the application
is refused and the
prejudice to the respondent if it is granted, the stage which the
particular litigation has reached, and the
general need for finality
in judicial proceedings
[6]
.
If the
court is satisfied on a conspectus of the aforementioned factors, it
will generally be inclined towards allowing the further
affidavits to
be filed.
[7]
While a further
affidavit as contemplated in the above cited authorities might
frequently be a supplementary answering or
replying affidavit, it
could also be a supplementary founding affidavit.
[8]
[29]
The court
has a discretion to refuse or grant amendments under rule 28 of the
Uniform Rules. Whilst it is desirable that all facts
be placed before
the court to facilitate the effective ventilation of a dispute, the
court's discretion must be exercised judicially
and on proper
principles.
[9]
These principles
are summarised by the Constitutional Court in
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Others
[10]
:
"[9]
...
[A]mendments will always be allowed unless the amendment is mala
fide (made in bad faith) or unless the amendment will cause an
injustice to the other side which cannot be cured by an appropriate
order for costs, or 'unless the parties cannot be put back for
the
purposes of justice in the same position as they were when the
pleading which it is sought to amend was filed'."
[30]
The courts
have further emphasised that proposed amendments must raise a triable
issue that is sufficiently important to justify
the prejudice and
costs to the other parties and the court.
[11]
The primary object of allowing
an
amendment
is to
obtain
a
proper
ventilation
of the
dispute
between
the
parties,
to
determine
the
real issues between them, so that justice may be done.
[12]
There
is no objection,
in
principle, to a new cause of action or defence being added by way of
an amendment,
even though
it has the effect
of changing
the
character
of the
action and necessitating the reopening of the case for fresh evidence
to be led, if that is necessary
to
determine the real issues between the parties.
[13]
## Discussion
Discussion
[31]
The respondents filed an extensive opposing affidavit in which they
strongly
asserted that the interlocutory applications should not be
permitted. They argue, in the main, that the proposed amendments
would
in effect result in the application failing to disclose a cause
of action or being vague and embarrassing in the sense that the
respondents do not know what case they are being called upon to meet.
[32]
In essence,
the type of objection raised by the respondents is akin to an
exception in action proceedings. Rule 23(1) of the Uniform
Rules
provides
inter
alia
that
where any pleading is vague and embarrassing or lacks averments to
sustain an action, the opposing party may deliver an exception
thereto and may set it down for hearing; provided that where a party
tends to take an exception that a pleading is vague and embarrassing,
the opponent must be given an opportunity of removing the cause of
complaint. There is no comparable procedure
for
exceptions
in
application
proceedings
as rule
23 only
applies
to action
proceedings. As Schippers J noted in
WP
Fresh Distributors
v
Klaaste NO
&
Others
[14]
:
"[5]
...
in
applications there is no recognized procedure for raising an
exception before the case comes to trial. Instead, rule 6(5)(d)
requires any person opposing an order sought in the notice of motion
to notify the applicant in writing that he or she intends
to oppose
the application; and to deliver an answering affidavit within
15
days of the notice of intention to oppose. If a respondent intends to
raise only a question of law, he or she is required to
deliver a
notice of this intention, setting forth the question of law. Thus a
respondent who wishes to raise a preliminary point
that a case
is
not made out in the founding papers, must do so in the answering
affidavit. This construction is buttressed by rule 6(14) which
expressly states that rules 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 apply mutatis
mutandis to all applications.
Rule 23 is not one of
them."
[33]
Accordingly, where a respondent opposes the relief sought in the
notice of
motion and intends only to raise a point of law (such as
that no cause of action is made out in the founding affidavit}, he or
she must file a rule 6(5)(d)(iii) notice. However, where the
respondent also intends to oppose the merits by way of an answering
affidavit, it is preferable that the point of law be taken as a point
in limine
in the answering affidavit itself.
[34]
In this matter, the objections raised by the respondents are not
confined merely
to points of law but traverses the merits as well.
The respondents have already filed an answering affidavit and the
applicant
has filed its replying affidavit. In
the
circumstances, a notice in terms of rule 6(5)(iii) would not have
assisted the respondents. The respondents could, however,
have raised
their points
in limine
or submissions relating thereto in a
supplementary answering affidavit. If the application did not
disclose a cause of action or
the proposed amendments resulted in the
applicant's pleadings being vague and embarrassing, the respondents
could have pointed
out any contradiction and have either denied the
averment or pleaded that they are not able to confirm or deny any
averment or
portion thereof.
[35]
The respondents have raised a plethora of issues for consideration by
this
Court. However, in my view, many of the arguments advanced by
the respondents relate to issues on the merits which ought properly
to be dealt with by the court hearing the main application: the
precise terms of the 1988 agreement and whether or not, in context,
it was in fact a trademark licensing agreement, the nature and ambit
of the consent granted to Mr Lapiner when he commenced the
new
business, whether the use of a distinguishing mark is permissible in
trademark law, the nature of a protectable interest in
an
unregistered trademark, whether the first and/or the third
respondents could ever claim to be the
bona fide
proprietor in
and to the "Pienaar Brother" and "Pienaar Bros"
trademarks, and the effect (if any) of the competition
law issues
raised by the respondents. What this court has to decide is simply
whether the amendments sought to be effected to the
notice of motion
are
bona fide
and are such that they do not cause undue
prejudice to the respondents.
[36]
I am of the view that the founding affidavit, when read with the
supplementary
founding affidavit, is not so unintelligible or
contradictory at a factual or legal level that it prejudices the
respondent from
furnishing a response thereto. From the detailed
response provided by the respondents in their opposing affidavit to
the interlocutory
applications, it certainly appears that they know
what case they must meet; indeed, much of the ground covered in their
affidavit
opposing the interlocutory applications was foreshadowed in
their answering affidavit.
[37]
The fact that the respondent chooses to provide a different version
of historical
events and a different interpretation of the nature of
the consent granted to the third respondent in 1988, does not alter
the
applicant's version in the founding affidavit or in the proposed
supplementary founding affidavit. Quite simply, the applicant alleges
that in terms of the 1988 agreement, the third respondent was granted
the right to use the Pienaar Brothers and Pienaar Bros trademarks
which the Pienaar North group has now impermissibly appropriated to
itself. As noted, it is not the function of this Court to determine
the merits of this matter. Suffice to say, I am of the view that
there is some merit in the applicant's contention that a trademark
license agreement was always the basis on which the agreement for Mr
Lapiner to extend the family business was concluded. The respondents
do not dispute that Mr Lapiner only started his business in 1988 with
the consent of the applicant to use the latter's trade name
and
branding. At that stage, Brian Pienaar did not have any independent
trademark of its own. What else could the applicant have
consented to
but the licence to use the applicant's trademarks which, it is not
disputed, had at that stage developed considerable
goodwill and
reputation?
[38]
Insofar as the respondents' argument that a new cause of action is
sought to
be introduced, namely
"repudiation of
a
trademark licence",
I am of the view that this is not the
case and that there is some merit in the applicant's contentions in
this regard. The repudiation
is not an entirely different cause of
action. The applicant's cause of action has always been based on
contract, and the claim
based on repudiation is thus merely an
extension and modification of what was previously claimed in the
contractual context. What
is now expressly in issue is whether the
conduct of the respondents constitute a repudiation which entitles
the applicant to cancel
the contract that was in place; if there has
indeed been a valid cancellation of the contract, the respondents
have no permission
to use the Pienaar Brothers and Pienaar Bros
trademarks, which is what the amended relief reflects.
[39]
Even if it
was to be found that a new cause of action would be introduced
because of the amendment, that would not necessarily mean
that the
amendment must be refused. This Court can exercise its discretion to
allow
such
an amendment
[15]
having regard
to the fact that it involves the same parties, the same facts, and
similar issues. The alternative would be for the
applicant to
withdraw the application, pay the wasted costs, and bring the
application again supplemented
by the new
matter. This would result in a waste of time, costs, and a less than
optimal use of scarce judicial resources.
[40]
The respondents also argue that the interlocutory applications have
been launched
in bad faith and are designed to cure the initial
difficulties in the applicant's founding affidavit, that the facts
sought to
be introduced were always within the knowledge of the
applicant, and that the applicant seeks to avoid the competition law
issues
which it has to confront in light of the submissions in this
regard in the respondents' answering affidavit. I do not agree. It
is
quite evident from the papers before me that some of the information
could only have come to the applicant's attention when
the answering
affidavit was filed, such as the nature of the relationship between
the first to sixth respondents
inter se
and, of course, Mr
Lapiner's version of the consent granted in 1988. In addition, the
competition law machinery has already been
activated and the
competition law authorities will no doubt act in accordance with the
law, rules, practices and procedures which
regulate their handling of
any competition law issues; their actions are unlikely to depend on
whether or not this Court grants
the amendment sought or allows the
introduction of the supplementary affidavit.
[41]
In my view, there is no merit in any of the arguments raised by the
respondents.
The proposed amendments to the applicant's notice of
motion seeks to address the real issues between the parties as they
have now
crystallised; there can be no reasonable objection to that.
Granting leave to file a supplementary founding affidavit provides
the respondents with adequate opportunity to address the new
allegations and prayers; again, the respondents could suffer no
discernible
prejudice therefrom.
Rule
30 application
[42]
The respondents' rule 30 application is premised on the contention
that the applicant prematurely applied
to have the main application
enrolled for hearing when it was not ripe for hearing as pleadings in
the main application had not
yet closed. In doing so, the respondents
argued that the applicant failed to comply with rule 29 of the
Uniform Rules and paragraphs
38 and 39 of section D (headed
"Trials
and Opposed Matters")
of the Practice Directives of the
Western Cape Division of the High Court dated 1 June 2022 ("the
Practice Directives").
[43]
The facts giving rise to the rule 30 application are not in dispute.
The main application was filed on 10
December 2021. On 5 July 2022,
after receipt of the answering papers in the main application, the
applicant filed the following:
[43.1]
a replying affidavit in the main application;
[43.2]
a notice in terms of Rule 28(1) containing details of how it intended
to
amend its notice of motion;
[43.3]
a supplementary founding affidavit and an application to have the
supplementary
founding affidavit admitted as evidence in the main
application proceedings; and
[43.4]
a joinder application in terms of which it requested the joinder of
the tenth
respondent.
[44]
On 8 August 2022, the respondents filed a notice to oppose the
application
to have the supplementary founding affidavit admitted as
evidence and a notice of objection to the applicant's Rule 28(1)
notice.
[45]
On 18 August 2022, the applicant's attorneys advised the respondents'
attorneys
that they had applied for the main application to be
enrolled for hearing on the opposed roll and provided them with a
copy of
the notice of enrolment dated 17 August 2022. The
respondents' attorneys, on 19 August 2022, addressed correspondence
to the applicant's
attorneys alleging,
inter alia,
that it was
inappropriate for the applicant to have enrolled the main application
for hearing and requested the applicant to
"remove the
enrolment of the matter".
In this correspondence, the
respondents' attorneys confirmed that they were of the view that the
applicant's interlocutory applications
should be set down for hearing
on the same day and that the date for the hearing of these
applications could be agreed to beforehand
between the parties and
the Registrar.
[46]
The applicant's attorneys disagreed and, on 23 August 2022, responded
to the
respondents' attorneys and indicated,
inter alia,
that:
[46.1] the
early enrolment of the matter was necessary due to the backlog in the
Fourth Division of the Western Cape
High Court, which meant that a
hearing before May or June 2023 was highly unlikely;
[46.2] it is
not customary in the Western Cape Division for parties to agree on
hearing dates beforehand because it
is less likely that the parties'
respective legal counsel will be unavailable many months down the
line;
[46.3] if the
allocated date of the hearing of the main application turned out to
be a problem, both parties could approach
the office of the Judge
President to seek to have a mutually acceptable alternative date
secured;
[46.4] while
the applicant was willing to accede to the respondents' request that
the applicant's interlocutory applications
be heard before the main
application, this did not mean that the applicant was required to
accept that the hearing of the main
application should be delayed
indefinitely;
[46.5] in the
applicant's view, the parties should approach the Judge President to
arrange a suitable date for the hearing
of the interlocutory
applications; and
[46.6] there
would be more than enough time after the aforesaid interlocutory
applications had been heard for the parties
to exchange further
supplementary answering and replying affidavits if the applications
were granted, and for the main application
still to proceed on the
date, in the last week of July 2023, on which it had been set down.
[47]
The respondents were not satisfied with this response and a rule
30(2)(b) notice
was served on the applicant. The applicant still
refused to remove the main application from the roll and the
respondents then
filed the rule 30 application on 3 October 2022.
[48]
Meanwhile, on 13 September 2022, the respondents had filed an
answering affidavit
in opposition to the applicant's interlocutory
applications. The applicant's replying affidavit in those
applications was filed
on 14 October 2022. Therefore, by 14 October
2022, the papers in the applicant's opposed interlocutory
applications were complete.
[49]
The joinder application - which was unopposed - was enrolled for
hearing on
14 October 2022 and was granted on that day.
[50]
After the tenth respondent had been added to the main application
pursuant
to the joinder application, a supplementary affidavit
setting out the amended relief which would be sought against the
tenth respondent
was filed by the applicant on 4 November 2022
## Relevant legal provisions
and authorities
Relevant legal provisions
and authorities
[51]
Rule 6(5)(f) of the Uniform Rules - on which the applicant relies -
reads as
follows:
"(f)(i) Where no
answering affidavit, or notice in terms of sub-paragraph
(iii)
of paragraph (d),
is
delivered within the period referred to
in sub-paragraph (ii) of paragraph (d) the applicant may within five
days of the expiry
thereof apply to the registrar to allocate a date
for the hearing of the application.
(ii)
Where an answering affidavit
is
delivered
the
applicant may apply for such allocation
within
five days of the delivery
of
a replying
affidavit or, if no replying
affidavit
is
delivered, within five days of the
expiry of
the period referred to in paragraph
(e) and where such notice
is
delivered the
applicant may apply for such allocation within five days after
delivery of such notice.
(iii)
If the applicant fails
so
to
apply within the appropriate
period
aforesaid,
the respondent may
do
so
immediately upon the expiry
thereof
. Notice in writing of the date allocated
by the registrar must be given by the applicant or respondent,
as
the
case
may be, to the opposite party within five days of
notification from the registrar."
(my emphasis)
[52]
Rule 29 - on which the respondents" rely - provides as follows:
"29
Close of pleadings and Notice of Set Down of trials
Pleadings
are
considered closed if
–
(1)
(a)
either
party
has
joined
issue
without alleging any new matter,
and without adding any further pleading;
(b)
the last day allowed for filing a replication or subsequent
pleading
has
elapsed and it
has
not been filed;
(c)
the parties agree in writing that the pleadings are closed and
such agreement
is
filed with the registrar; or
(d)
the parties are unable to agree
as
to the close of
pleadings, and the court upon the application of a party declares
them closed.
(2)
(a)
Upon allocation of a
date or dates for trial, the registrar must inform all parties
of the allocated dates.
(b)
The party which applied for the trial date must, within 10
days of notification from the registrar, deliver
a
notice
informing ail other parties of the date or dates on which the matter
is set down for trial."
(my emphasis)
[53]
Rule 30 - in terms of which the respondents' application has been
brought -
reads thus:
### "30 Irregular
proceedings
"30 Irregular
proceedings
###
(1)
A party to
a
cause in which an irregular step has been
taken by any other party may apply to court to set it aside.
(2)
An application in terms of subrule (1) shall be on notice to
all parties specifying particulars of the irregularity or impropriety
alleged, and may be made only if-
(a)
the applicant has not himself taken
a
further step in
the cause with knowledge of the irregularity;
(b)
the applicant has, within ten days of becoming aware of the
step, by written notice afforded his opponent an opportunity of
removing
the cause of complaint within ten days;
(c)
the application is delivered within fifteen days after the
expiry of the second period mentioned in paragraph (b) of subrule
(2).
(3)
If
at the hearing of such application the court
is of opinion that the proceeding or step is irregular or improper,
it may set it aside
in whole or in part, either as against all the
parties or
as
against some of them, and grant leave to amend
or make any such order as to it seems meet.
(4)
Until a party has complied with any order of court made
against him in terms of this rule, he shall not take any further step
in
the cause,
save
to apply
for
an
extension
of
time
within
which
to comply with such
order."
[54]
Paragraphs 38 and 39 of the Practice Directives provide that:
### "D.
TRIALS AND OPPOSED MATTERS
"D.
TRIALS AND OPPOSED MATTERS
###
38.
Upon the close of pleadings, the plaintiff's Legal
representative, or if he or
she
fails to do
so,
any
party, may apply for a trial date by entering the relevant
particulars
as
required by the Registrar in a register
kept for that purpose.
39.
Before applying for a date of set down, the Legal
representative in question shall collate, number consecutively
and suitably secure all pages of the pleadings and documents
in the court file.
A complete index thereof, together
with a questionnaire substantially in accordance with form E in the
Schedule hereto, shall also
be prepared and delivered."
### [55]InSAMetropolitanLewensversekeringsmaatskappyBpkvLouwNO,[16]Flemming J described the object of Rule 30(1) as follows:
[55]
In
SA
Metropolitan
Lewensversekeringsmaatskappy
Bpk
v
Louw
NO,
[16]
Flemming J described the object of Rule 30(1) as follows:
"I have no doubt
that Rule 30(1)
was
intended
as
a procedure whereby a
hindrance to the future conducting of the litigation,
whether
it
is
created by a non-observance of what the Rules of
Court intended or otherwise, is removed."
[56]
Rule 30 is only applicable to irregularities of form and not to
matters of substance,
[17]
and
proof of prejudice is a prerequisite to be successful in a rule 30(1)
application.
[18]
The court
moreover has a discretion under rule 30 and is entitled to overlook,
in proper cases, any irregularity which does not
cause any
substantial
prejudice
to
the
other
party.
[19]
As
stated
by
Cloete
J
(as
he
then was)
in
Uitenhage
Municipality v Uys:
[20]
"The principle
has repeatedly been laid down in our Courts that the Court is
entitled to overlook, in proper cases, any irregularity
in procedure
which does not work any substantial prejudice to the other side...ln
Trans-African Insurance
Co.
Ltd. v
Maluleka,
Schreiner JA says:
"...
technical
objections to less than perfect procedural steps should not be
permitted, in the absence of prejudice, to interfere with
the
expeditious
and, if possible, inexpensive decision of
cases on their real
merits"
(text-book
reference and case citation omitted).
[57]
While it is
possible in principle for a rule 30 application to be brought
complaining of a premature set-down
[21]
,
it would
need to be shown not only that the set-down was irregular, but also
that this caused the complaining party real or substantial
prejudice.
## Discussion
Discussion
[58]
The respondents contend that the applicants set down of the main
application
is irregular in that the applicant failed to comply with
rule 29 of the Uniform Rules and with paragraphs 38 and 39 of the
Practice
Directives. However, it is quite apparent from rule 29 that
this rule applies to trials and not to opposed applications.
Similarly,
the relevant paragraphs of the Practise Directives relied
on by the respondents apply to trials, notwithstanding the use of the
words
"AND OPPOSED MATTERS"
in the
heading. The form E referred to in the Practise Directives relates to
a Rule 37 Questionnaire that must be completed on behalf
of the
parties to action proceedings. The set down by the applicant of the
main application cannot thus be irregular on the basis
argued by the
respondents and must fail on this score alone.
[59]
I agree with applicant's counsel that the operative rule in relation
to the set down of applications is rule
6(5)(f). On the undisputed
facts, the replying affidavit was filed on 5 July 2022. The applicant
therefore became entitled to apply
for a hearing date five (5) days
thereafter, in terms of Rule 6(5)(f)(ii), ie from 13 July 2022
onwards. The main application was
enrolled for a hearing date on 17
August 2022, and the enrolment was thus not premature or irregular.
[60]
The respondents also contend that the main application was enrolled
prematurely and irregularly because the
two interlocutory
applications would have to be heard first. This is not quite so.
Rather, opposed interlocutory applications,
such as those of the
applicant, would, in the ordinary course, be set down for hearing
together with the main application, with
a party resisting such
applications conditionally "pleading over", should they so
choose, thereby catering for an eventuality
in which they are
unsuccessful in resisting the interlocutory applications. In this
matter, the applicant agreed with the respondents
to have the opposed
interlocutory applications determined first. This did not mean,
however, that the applicant was not entitled
to apply for a hearing
date in the main application. As it turned out, the applicant's
interlocutory applications were indeed
set-down some four months
before the hearing date of the main application.
[61]
Since the set-down of the main application for hearing was not
procedurally
irregular or premature, the question of prejudice does
not arise.
[62]
Given the conclusion reached by this Court in respect of the
interlocutory
applications, it is likely that the main application
will not be able to proceed on 26 July 2023. However, the applicant
has already
indicated that it is amenable to another set-down date,
having stated the following in this regard in paragraph 4.12 of its
answering
affidavit in the rule 30 application:
"If circumstances
beyond the parties' control (not presently foreseeable) were to
result in the main application being unable
to proceed on the date
that has been allocated, the parties could also agree to approach the
office of the Judge President at that
stage to make arrangements to
possibly have a mutually acceptable hearing date secured."
Hopefully,
the parties will jointly approach the office of the Judge President
to arrange a mutually convenient date for the hearing
of the main
application, should they wish to continue with this matter.
# COSTS
COSTS
[63]
The applicant sought an indulgence with its interlocutory
applications. As
such, it would ordinarily bear the costs of these
applications if the respondents' opposition was not unreasonable.
Given the nature
of the changes to the applicant's case
foreshadowed by the interlocutory applications, the respondents'
opposition was not
unreasonable. However, the interlocutory
applications were clearly as a consequence of the respondents
answering affidavit. Given
the detailed opposing affidavit and
extensive heads of argument filed by the respondent, one wonders why
the respondent did not
adopt what might have been the more prudent
course of filing a supplementary answering affidavit as was suggested
by the applicant.
In any event, the papers filed in the interlocutory
applications may well lay the basis for any further papers which may
have to
be delivered in this matter. In the circumstances, it appears
to be a much fairer result if the costs of the interlocutory
applications
were to be determined as costs in the cause.
[64]
In so far as the rule 30 application is concerned, this is a discrete
application
and I do not see any reason to depart from the usual rule
that costs follow the result.
# [65]
ORDER
[65]
ORDER
In
the circumstances, I grant the following order:
65.1.
The application to have the supplementary founding affidavit of
Jacqueline Bredebelet admitted as
evidence in these proceedings, is
granted.
65.2.
The applicant is granted leave to amend its notice of motion as
follows:
65.2.1 Deleting
prayers 1, 3 and 6;
65.2.2 Inserting a
new prayer 1 that reads as follows:
•
"Declaring
that the conduct of the Pienaar North Group (as defined in paragraph
2.1 of the supplementary founding affidavit)
constitutes a
repudiation of the 1988 agreement (or any agreements found to have
been in place between the parties) and that the
agreement(s) has I
have been validly cancelled.";
65.2.3 Amending the
wording of prayer 2 to read as follows:
•
"Interdicting
and restraining the First, Second, Third,
Fourth, Fifth
and Tenth Respondents from using the
names 'Pienaar
Brothers' or 'Pienaar Bros', or any other names or trademarks
confusingly or deceptively similar thereto, anywhere
in South
Africa.";
65.2.4 Inserting a
new prayer 3 that reads as follows:
•
"Ordering
the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth and Tenth Respondents, in the
presence of an authorised agent of
the Applicant, to
destroy all printed matter and materials, product packaging, signage
and the like bearing the
names 'Pienaar Brothers' or
'Pienaar Bros' or any other names or trademarks confusingly or
deceptively similar thereto, which are
under their control;
alternatively, at the option of the said respondents, to deliver up
for destruction all such materials to
the Applicant.";
65.2.5
Re-numbering prayer 4 to prayer 5;
65.2.6 Inserting a
new prayer 4 that reads as follows:
•
"Directing
that an enquiry be held for the purposes of determining the amount of
any damages, or a reasonable royalty in lieu
thereof, to be awarded
to the Applicant as a result of unauthorised use by the First,
Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth and Tenth Respondents
of the infringing
names 'Pienaar Brothers' and 'Pienaar Bros', or any other confusingly
or deceptively similar names or trademarks
thereto, in accordance
with such procedures as the Honourable Court may deem fit, and that
said
Respondents be ordered, jointly and severally, to
pay the amount found due to the Applicant.";
65.2.7 Re-numbering
prayer 5 to prayer 6;
65.2.8 Amending
prayer 7 replacing
"Second
Respondent”
with the phrase
"First, Second,
Third, Fourth, Fifth and Tenth Respondents";
65.2.9 Amending
prayer 8 by replacing the phrase
"and directing the Ninth
Respondent to remove him as a director of the Applicant”
with the phrase
"and directing the Ninth Respondent to
impose a ban on the Sixth Respondent
from holding any
directorship
position for a period of
7
years
from the date of the order";
65.2.10
Amending prayer 9 by replacing the phrase
"Fourth Respondent,
Nkosazana Pienaar Bros and the Fifth Respondent, Zahara Pienaarbros
North"
with the phrase
"Second, Fourth and Fifth
Respondents";
65.2.11
Amending prayer 10 by replacing the phrases
"Fourth
Respondent and/or the Fifth Respondents"
with the phrase
"Second, Fourth and I or Fifth Respondents";
and
65.2.12
Amending prayer 11 by replacing the phrase
"First, Second,
Third, Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Respondents"
with the phrase
"First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Tenth
Respondents".
65.3.
The costs of the applications referred to in paragraphs 65.1 and 65.2
above shall be costs in the
cause.
65.4.
The respondents' application in terms of rule 30 of the Uniform Rules
of Court is dismissed, and the
first to sixth respondents are
directed to pay the costs of this application, jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to
be absolved, including the costs
consequent upon the employment of two counsel, one of whom is a
senior.
FRANCIS,
J
APPEARANCES.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
PBJ
Farlam SC
LG
Kilmartin
APPLICANT'S
ATTORNEYS
OF RECORD:
Von
Seidels
Hugo
Prinsloo
COUNSEL
FOR FIRST, SECOND, THIRD,
FOURTH,
FIFTH, SIXTH AND
TENTH
RESPONDENTS
:
S
Symon SC
G
Marriott A Cachalia
FIRST,
SECOND, THIRD, FOURTH,
FIFTH,
SIXTH AND TENTH
RESPONDENTS
ATTORNEYS OF RECORD:
BM
Duchen Attorneys
Benji
Duchen
[1]
Both parties delivered detailed heads of argument on the legal
principles applicable to
all three
applications for
which I am
grateful, and from which I have drawn liberally.
[2]
Kasiyamhuru
v Minister of Home Affairs
1991
(1) SA 643
(W)
at 649
to
650.
[3]
Joseph
and Jeans v Spitz
1931
WLD 48.
[4]
Reiseberg
v Reiseberg
1926
WLD 59.
[5]
Milne
NO v Fabric House (Pty} Ltd
1957
(3) SA 63
(N)
at
GSA.
[6]
Porter
Straat 69 Eiendomme
(Pty)
Ltd v PA Venter Worcester
{Pty)
ltd
2000
(4) SA 598
(C);
and
Mkwanazi
v Van Der Merwe
1970
(1) SA 609
(A)
at 626
A -
G.
[7]
Transvaal
Racing Club v Jockey Club of South Africa
1958
(3) SA 599
(W)
at
604 A -
F.
[8]
Anglo
Operations ltd
v
Sandhurst Estates (Pty) Ltd
2007
(2) SA 363 (SCA).
[9]
Caxton
Ltd v Reeva Forman {Pty) ltd
[1990] ZASCA 47
;
1990
(3) SA 547
(A)
at
565 G.
[10]
Affordable
Medicines Trust And Others v Minister of Health and Others
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3)
SA 247
(CC)
at
para 9.
[11]
Caxton
Ltd And Others v Reeva Forman
(Pty)
Ltd And Another
[1990] ZASCA 47
;
1990 (3) SA 547
(A)
at
565, citing De Villiers JP in
Krogman
v Van Reenen
1926 OPD 191
at
195.
[12]
Benjamin
v Sobac South African
Building
and
Construction
(Pty)
Ltd
1989
(4) SA 940
(C)
at 957
H -
958
C.
[13]
Myers
v Abramson
1951
(3) SA 438
(C)
at 449
H -
450
A.
[14]
[
2013]
ZA WCHC 95 (23 April 2013)
quoted
with approval in
Lang
v Wilhelmus
(2023]
JOL 57874,
at
para 5. See also
Minister
of Finance v Public Protector
and
Others
2022
(1) SA 244
(GP)
at
para 13.
[15]
Marigold
tee Cream (Pty) Ltd v National Co-operative Dairies Ltd
1991
(2)
SA 671
(W)
at
677-678.
[16]
1981
(4)
SA 329 (O)
at
333 G-H.
[17]
Singh
v Vorkel
1947
(3) SA 400
(C)
at
406.
[18]
Gardiner
v Survey Engineering (Pty) Ltd
1993
(3) SA 549
(SE)
at
551 C-D.
[19]
Trans-African
Insurance Co Limited v Maluleka
1956
(2) SA 273
(A)
at 276
F-H.
[20]
1974
(3) SA 800
(E)
at
805 D-F (quoted with approval in
Gardiner
v Survey Engineering (Pty) Ltd.
Id.
at SSlGH.
[21]
Santam
Versekeringsmaatskappy v leibrandt
1969
(1)
SA 604 (C).
sino noindex
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