Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 337South Africa
Resident of Paradise Park Listed on Annexure Marked 'Z' v Magna Business Services (Pty) Ltd and Another (19610/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 337 (20 November 2023)
Headnotes
of what brought them to court must be understood with that in mind. There were two key events.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Resident of Paradise Park Listed on Annexure Marked 'Z' v Magna Business Services (Pty) Ltd and Another (19610/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 337 (20 November 2023)
Resident of Paradise Park Listed on Annexure Marked 'Z' v Magna Business Services (Pty) Ltd and Another (19610/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 337 (20 November 2023)
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sino date 20 November 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
#
# CASE NO.:
19610/2023
CASE NO.:
19610/2023
#
In
the matter between:
RESIDENTS
OF PARADISE PARK
Applicants
LISTED
ON ANNEXURE MARKED “Z”
and
MAGNA
BUSINESS SERVICES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LTD
Second
Respondent
Coram:
Bishop, AJ
Dates
of Hearing: 14
and 17 November 2023
Date
of Judgment: 20
November 2023
JUDGMENT
BISHOP,
AJ
[1]
In this urgent application, the Applicants
– the residents of an estate called Paradise Park in Hermanus –
complain
that their electricity is being unlawfully disconnected, and
that they are being denied visitors. They initially sought relief
against both the First Respondent (
Magna
)
and the Second Respondent (
Eskom
).
Magna is the owner of Paradise Park The operative relief was to
interdict both respondents from disconnecting the Applicants’
electricity, and to interdict Magna from implementing a decision to
restrict visitors.
[2]
The matter has a long history. This Court
granted an eviction order against some of the Applicants on 10
December 2019. An appeal
against that order is pending before a Full
Court of this Division. Le Grange J granted another eviction order
against all the
residents on 20 April 2022. A late application for
leave to appeal that order is currently before the Constitutional
Court.
[3]
Fortunately, the details of that history
need not concern me. As I narrate briefly below, the parties were
agreed that the matter
could not proceed and should be postponed.
They were largely in agreement about how to regulate their
relationships until the matter
could be heard. The only issues on
which they could not agree, and which I was called to decide were:
the extent of interim relief
the Applicants should be granted to
allow them visitors; who should pay Eskom’s costs; and who
should pay the wasted costs
of the hearing on 17 November 2023.
### Brief Background
Brief Background
[4]
I only have the Applicants’ version
of what occurred before me. This brief summary of what brought them
to court must be understood
with that in mind. There were two key
events.
[5]
First, on 9 October 2023, Magna sent
notices to the Applicants that “electricity to the dwelling
which you are illegally occupying
at Paradise Park will be
disconnected and the pre-paid electricity meter will be removed, with
effect from 1 November 2023.”
The next day, the Applicants’
attorneys sought an undertaking by 19 October 2023 that they would
not proceed with the disconnection.
Magna did not provide that
undertaking.
[6]
The Applicants allege that some of them
require electricity for health reasons. They claim that five
residents (not all of whom
are applicants) use oxygen machines, and
some require insulin, which must be refrigerated. They also claim
that loss of electricity
will affect the ability of the 23 children
living in Paradise Park to study for their upcoming final exams.
[7]
The application was launched on 3 November
2023. I was informed from the bar that, when the matter was argued on
14 November 2023,
electricity had not been disconnected.
[8]
Second, on 12 October 2023, Magna sent
another notice to the Applicants. It claimed that “certain of
the illegal occupiers
are sneaking in new illegal occupiers into
Paradise Park under the guise of visitors”. The notice set out
new rules to regulate
visits with effect from the next day. It read:
1.
No visitors will be allowed without pre-approval.
2.
All
potential visitors will have to complete the attached “Visitors
Application Form” and email it to
h[...]@sablecape.co.za
for approval.
2.1.
The elderly illegal occupiers making use of daily support staff, will
only have to apply once and if the requirements are met, will obtain
a day pass for entry of the support staff to Paradise Park.
2.2.
All other
applications must reach
h[...]@sablecape.co.za
24 hours in advance of the proposed visit by the visitor.
3.
No Access will be allowed without the approval.
4.
Only Day visitors will be allowed.
[9]
The Applicants complain that they were not
consulted about these rules before they were made, and that this
failure violated their
right to natural justice. They describe the
rules as “draconian” and contend that they interfere with
the ability of
carers and nurses to visit elderly or sick residents.
They also claim they have a right for their loved ones to sleepover.
They
seek an order interdicting Magna “from interfering with
and/or limiting and/or hindering the access of the visitors to
Paradise
Park”.
### The Proceedings
The Proceedings
[10]
The matter was set down for hearing before
me on 14 November 2023. The application was launched on 3 November
2023. It called on
the Respondents to oppose within three days, and
to file answering affidavits within five days. That meant that the
answering affidavits
were, in terms of the notice of motion, only due
on 16 November 2023; the day
after
the hearing.
[11]
By the morning of the hearing, I had been
informed that Eskom intended opposing the application, but had not
received any answering
affidavits. It seems that the reason there was
no notice to oppose was that the application that was served on Eskom
had no case
number, and so it was not able to file its notice to
oppose.
[12]
At the hearing, Eskom handed up its
answering affidavit and a counter application. In its answer,
Eskom contends that the relief
is improperly sought against it. It
has not yet taken any steps to disconnect the Applicants’
electricity. A decision whether
to do so must still be made. Any
attempts to disconnect electricity were – it alleges –
taken by Magna. In the counter-application
Eskom seeks an order to
compel Magna to comply with the payment conditions in the electricity
supply agreement between them, to
pay its outstanding arrears, and to
pay Eskom monthly for electricity consumption. In short, Eskom
claimed it had nothing to do
with any disconnection, and that the
Applicants had inappropriately pulled it into a fight between them
and Magna.
[13]
At the hearing, the Applicants’
counsel conceded that relief should not have been sought against
Eskom; it should have been
directed only against Magna. It agreed to
withdraw its application against Eskom. Eskom in turn agreed to
remove its counter-application
against Magna from the urgent roll. It
would prosecute it in due course.
[14]
On 15 November 2023, it seemed that only
two issues remained: how to regulate the further conduct of the main
application against
Magna, and who should pay Eskom’s costs.
The issue of visitors did not arise in the debate.
[15]
Counsel for the Applicants and Magna agreed
to try to reach an agreement on the further conduct of the matter.
The basic outline
I set for the parties at the hearing was as
follows:
[15.1]
The matter would be heard in the first week
of February when a judge could be specially allocated to hear it;
[15.2]
The parties would agree on the exchange of
papers to ensure that the Respondent’s heads of argument would
be filed at least
two weeks before the hearing;
[15.3]
Until the hearing, Magna would not
disconnect the Applicants’ electricity. The Applicants would
pay for all electricity they
used during that period; and
[15.4]
If either party defaulted on those
obligations – if Magna disconnected the electricity, or if the
Applicants failed to pay
– the other party would be entitled to
set the matter down on the urgent roll on reasonable notice.
[16]
A draft order along those lines was
provided to me on the morning of 15 November 2023. Its terms are
incorporated in the order I
make below. The order did not mention the
issue of visitors. I assumed that issue did not immediately concern
the Applicants. As
it turns out, I was mistaken.
[17]
The Applicants and Eskom could not agree on
who should pay Eskom’s costs. Eskom claimed it had been wrongly
dragged to court,
but had no choice but to defend itself. The
Applicants seemed to claim that they had merely made a mistake and
should not be mulcted
in costs given the constitutional rights at
stake.
[18]
That is where the matter ended on 14
November 2023. I had prepared a judgment addressing those two issues
and planned to deliver
it by the end of the week.
[19]
However, on 15 November 2023, the
Applicants’ counsel wrote an email to my registrar. It referred
to the relief his clients
had initially sought concerning the
restrictions on visitors and claimed the parties had been unable to
agree on provisions in
the draft to address the issue. He asked that
I hear that outstanding issue on Friday 17 November 2023, when I was
again on urgent
duty, and when Magna’s counsel was also
available.
[20]
I must say at the outset that this is not
the correct way to address the problem. The Applicants had every
chance to argue this
issue when the application was properly on the
roll on 14 November 2023. Their counsel did not do so. He did not
mention it at
all. Plainly the Applicants realised after the hearing
that they ought to have persisted with this part of their
application. But
it was too late. There is no procedure that allows a
litigant to simply write to a judge’s registrar to seek a new
hearing
on an issue its counsel neglected to argue.
[21]
Nonetheless, because some of the residents
appear to be elderly and vulnerable, and because their constitutional
rights may be at
stake, I agreed to hear the Applicants again on 17
November 2023. I did so on the understanding that this was acceptable
to Magna’s
counsel, and that my decision would be conveyed to
Magna’s counsel.
[22]
Magna’s counsel wrote to my registrar
early on the morning of 17 November 2023. She indicated that the
Applicants’ counsel
had raised the issue of the visitors only
after the draft order had been agreed to and sent to my registrar.
The Applicants’
counsel had then requested a complete
suspension of any restrictions. Magna had refused, but was willing to
agree to an alternative,
which the Applicants rejected. She also –
quite rightly – objected to the manner in which the Applicants’
counsel
had sought a second bite at the proverbial cherry. She
indicated that, having agreed to a timetable to file answering
affidavits
for a hearing in February, her client was suddenly
confronted with a hearing the next day. That was obviously
prejudicial and her
client was unable to prepare answering affidavits
in time.
[23]
That was the position when I heard the
parties again on 17 November 2023. I expressed my displeasure to the
Applicants’ counsel
about the manner in which the matter had,
again, been brought before the Court. But I also indicated a
preliminary view that the
prohibition on visitors may be overbroad.
[24]
Magna’s counsel agreed, and handed up
a draft order that contained the proposal her client had made to the
Applicants on 15
November 2023. It provided for a range of exceptions
from the general 24-hour rule. It did not provide for any exceptions
from
the no sleepover rule. I indicated that I appreciated the
concessions, but thought that the absolute prohibition on sleepovers
should be slightly relaxed to accommodate both the health
requirements of some residents, and the right to family life of the
residents.
[25]
The parties agreed to try to seek agreement
on the issue. They provided two draft orders later that day setting
out where they agreed,
and where they continued to differ. The
differences – which I address below – were minor.
### Eskom’s Costs
Eskom’s Costs
[26]
Eskom costs argues that no relief should
ever have been sought against it. I was informed from the bar that
Eskom’s attorneys
had communicated this fact to the Applicant’s
attorneys prior to the hearing of the matter, but had received no
response.
The Applicants’ counsel did not dispute this. He was
also forced to concede that there was no basis for relief against
Eskom
and to withdraw that part of the application. But this occurred
only at the hearing. Eskom, unaware that the Applicants would not
seek relief against them, quite reasonably instructed attorneys and
counsel to attend court to protect its interests.
[27]
It seems to me that there are three options
on costs. First, I could grant an ordinary order of costs against the
Applicants. Second,
I could order the Applicants’ attorneys to
pay the costs
de bonis propriis
.
Third, I could determine that, given the constitutional rights at
stake, there should be no order as to costs.
[28]
Each
of these options has drawbacks. I am not convinced the Applicants’
are to blame for the manner in which their relief
was formulated to
include Eskom. Their attorneys’ apparent failure to respond to
Eskom’s attorneys also cannot be laid
at their feet. But I am
not sure that it would be appropriate for me to mulct the Applicants’
attorneys in costs without
at least affording them an opportunity to
explain themselves. If the matter was to proceed in any event, I
would probably have
ordered them to do so. But there is no longer a
substantive dispute between the Applicants and Eskom and such an
order may just
incur further costs to determine who should pay the
existing costs. Finally, the Applicants do assert certain
constitutional rights.
Some of them assert they have health problems
that require electricity to, for example, power a machine to provide
oxygen or cool
insulin.
[1]
The
supply of electricity is itself constitutionally protected, at least
in some circumstances.
[2]
Biowatch
[3]
would
ordinarily protect them from an adverse costs award, but the manner
in which this litigation was conducted may well fall into
one of the
exceptions justifying costs even against those asserting
constitutional rights. Sachs J summarized those exceptions
in these
terms:
If an application is
frivolous or vexatious, or in any other way manifestly inappropriate,
the applicant should not expect that
the worthiness of its cause will
immunise it against an adverse costs award. Nevertheless, for the
reasons given above, courts
should not lightly turn their backs on
the general approach of not awarding costs against an unsuccessful
litigant in proceedings
against the state, where matters of genuine
constitutional import arise.
[4]
[29]
Ultimately, I have decided that the
application against Eskom was frivolous and manifestly inappropriate.
Eskom should never have
been brought to court and should not be
required to pay the costs. Eskom’s resources are far from
limitless. When it expends
resources to reasonably defend
inappropriate litigation, it cannot spend those resources on more
worthwhile matters.
[30]
What I am unable to decide is whether the
Applicants or their attorneys should pay Eskom’s costs. I have
therefore decided
to afford the attorneys an opportunity to explain
why they should not pay Eskom’s costs
de
bonis propriis
. I must make two things
clear. One: I have determined that either the Applicants or their
attorneys will pay Eskom’s costs.
That issue is not open for
re-evaluation. Two: It is not necessary for Eskom to file papers to
determine who should pay its costs.
It may do so. But it may also
decide it does not matter who pays its costs, and that it will not
spend further money on the issue.
### Visitors
Visitors
[31]
I must first re-emphasise that the manner
in which the Applicants’ sought to place the issue of visitors
before me again was
entirely inappropriate. Counsel are required to
address all issues relevant to their clients when a matter is
properly set down
before a court. They cannot claim another hearing
when they realise the following day they failed to cover a vital
issue. It is
an all-too-common reality of practice that counsel
realises the next day what she should have said the day before. Court
would
be completely unmanageable if parties were entitled to
informally “re-enroll” matters because of counsel’s
forgetfulness.
[32]
The only reason I permitted it in this case
was because of my concern for some of the residents, and because
constitutional rights
were at stake. There are two relevant
constitutional rights:
[32.1]
Most obviously, the right to healthcare in
s 27(1)(a). Some of the residents appear to be elderly and sickly.
They require care.
It is vital that any policy regulating visitors
does not interfere with them receiving the care they need.
[32.2]
The
Constitution guarantees a right to family life as an element of the
right to dignity.
[5]
That
includes the right to be able to visit at least your close family
members.
[33]
Rights do not always impose obligations on
private parties to respect those rights. Whether a right imposes a
concomitant obligation
on a private party is regulated by ss 8(2) and
8(3) of the Constitution. In this instance, it seems to me – at
least on a
prima facie basis – that Magna may have obligations
under both s 27(1)(a) and s 10.
[33.1]
If you as a private party control access to
land, you cannot ordinarily use that power to deny people access in a
way that threatens
residents’ health. That seems
uncontroversial and Magna accepted as much.
[33.2]
A private party’s obligations to
respect the right to family life are less obvious. Landowners can
legitimately limit access
for a variety of reasons. The most obvious
is security, but there may be others. Magna’s concern was that
– while it
had an eviction order – allowing free access
would increase the number of unlawful occupiers and make the ultimate
eviction
more difficult and costly. That is a legitimate concern. But
the right to family life – the right to see the members of your
immediate family – is constitutionally significant. It cuts to
the heart of what it is to be human. I am not convinced a
landowner
can discount that right without weighty justification.
[34]
The initial restriction on visitors was
extremely blunt. It only permitted day visitors. It required all
visitors to obtain pre-approval
24 hours before the visit. The only
exception was for support staff for elderly residents who would only
need to obtain approval
once. But they would still be limited to
access during the day. Of course, while the restriction was strong,
nothing prevented
residents from leaving Paradise Park to visit
friends and family outside.
[35]
It seemed to me that it would be possible
for Magna to achieve its goals with a more carefully tailored
restriction that would allow
medical visits without notice, would
allow medical visits overnight when necessary, and would allow
immediate family to visit overnight.
Magna had already proposed a
more limited order that largely addressed these concerns.
[36]
In my view, the proposal made by Magna
meets these requirements. It would operate as follows:
[36.1]
Any person can visit on 24 hours’
written request, but must leave by 20:00.
[36.2]
Parents, children and siblings will be
allowed to sleep over subject to: (a) 24 hours’ notice; (b) the
details of the request
and the duration being provided in advance;
(c) the resident must be present during the sleepover; (d) the
resident is responsible
for all the costs; and (e) each
resident is entitled to only four guests at a time for up to three
days;
[36.3]
Professional carers required to sleep over
night will be permitted subject to prior approval;
[36.4]
Visits without notice will be permitted
provided that: (a) the resident is present; (b) the access control
manager has been provided
with a doctor’s certificate
indicating the resident cannot medically visit guests elsewhere; (c)
the visitor can only visit
that resident; and (d) they may only visit
until 20:00; and
[36.5]
All medical staff shall be permitted to
assist any of the applicants at any time, subject only to providing
identification.
[37]
As Magna has already made substantial
concessions, and has not had a fair opportunity to justify its
restrictions, I am extremely
hesitant to order it to do anything it
has not agreed to. I would only do so if the constitutional violation
was manifest. With
that in mind, the Applicants raise the following
objections to these proposals:
[37.1]
All visitors should have to provide only
four hours’ notice, not 24 hours. I do not think this is
necessary. 24 hours is,
in the circumstances, a reasonable
restriction.
[37.2]
Visitors should be allowed to stay until
midnight. Again, I do not think the Constitution requires that.
Magna’s fear that
visitors will become occupiers is obviously
enhanced the longer they are permitted to stay.
[37.3]
The Applicants’ object to being
responsible for the costs and expenses incurred by their guests. It
is not clear what costs
Magna anticipates. But it is also not clear
why, if there are any costs, Magna should bear them. I see no merit
in this objection.
[37.4]
They seek to allow direct family members to
stay overnight for 12 consecutive days, instead of three. Once more,
I do not think
three days is an unreasonable line. If there are
special circumstances justifying a longer visit, I would expect Magna
to consider
them.
[37.5]
They ask for special rules for bereavements
and birthdays. I do not think these are necessary. Magna’s
proposals are adequate
to provide for these situations if they
applied with some common sense by both Magna and the residents.
[38]
Ultimately these are interim arrangements
that will be in place until the hearing of the matter in February.
They need not be perfect.
I will also make it clear that the order
will not prevent Magna from granting wider access than the order
requires.
### Conclusion and Wasted
Costs
Conclusion and Wasted
Costs
[39]
The manner in which this application was
litigated must be deprecated. The Applicants unnecessarily called
Eskom to Court at great
cost to the public purse. They came to Court
without affording a proper timeline to ensure the matter could
proceed on 14 November
2023. And then they came back for another
attempt on 17 November 2023, having rejected an offer from Magna that
largely reflects
the order I now make. All of this was unnecessarily
disruptive to the parties and the Court. If I did not have some
sympathy for
the Applicants and suspect that the fault lay with their
attorneys and counsel, I would not have considered the matter so
generously.
[40]
That leaves the costs between the
Applicants and Magna occasioned by the urgent hearing. Those will
stand over for later determination,
save for the costs of the hearing
of Friday 17 November 2023. Those costs must be borne by the
Applicants or their attorneys. The
matter ought never to have been
heard over two days. It seems, on the face of it, that it was the
Applicants’ legal representatives’
negligence that
required a second hearing. However, I am again hesitant to make that
finding without affording them an opportunity
to be heard. I
therefore make a similar order to the one I have made concerning
Eskom’s costs. Again, I have decided that
either the Applicants
or their attorneys must pay those costs. The only question is which
of the two must pay.
[41]
Finally, I record that, at the request of
the Acting Deputy Judge President, I will be keeping the file and
will hear the matter
on the date to which it is postponed.
[42]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1.
That the application against the Second
Respondent is withdrawn.
2.
That the Second Respondent’s counter
application is removed from the urgent roll.
3.
Th
at
the
present
Application between the Applicants and the First Respondent is
postponed for an expedited hearing before Acting Justice Bishop
on
5
February 2024
.
4.
That the further conduct of the matter
between the Applicants and the First Respondent shall be regulated as
follows:
4.1.
That the First Respondent shall file its
answering affidavit on or before
1
December 2023
;
4.2.
The Applicant shall file their replying
affidavit on or before
15 December
2023
; and
4.3.
The parties shall file heads of argument in
terms of the Practice Directives of this Court.
5.
That pending the
hearing of the matter, the use of electricity at Paradise Park shall
be regulated as follows:
5.1.
The
First Respo
ndent undertakes not
to disconnect the electricity supply at Paradise Park or to remove
the prepaid meters;
5.2.
The Applicants undertake to pay for all the
electricity which they consume; and
5.3.
Should either p
arty fail to comply with the
above undertakings, the aggrieved party may set the matter down in
the fast lane on appropriate notice
to the other party.
6.
That pending the
hearing of the matter, the visitation of residents at Paradise Park
shall be regulated as follows
6.1.
Day visitors can enter the Park, subject to:
6.1.1.
Obtaining the necessary prior consent from the First Respondent’s
access control manager on at least
24 hours’ written request.
6.1.2.
The written request can be made either via email or via electronic
text message to the cell number of the
First Respondent’s
access control manager.
6.1.3.
Day visitors will not be permitted to stay over at or in the resort
and must vacate the park by no later
than 20:00 every evening.
6.2.
That the only exceptions to the above arrangements will be the
following:
6.2.1.
Parents, children and siblings of an Applicant will be allowed to
sleep over at (and only at) that Applicant’s
residence, subject
to the following:
6.2.1.1.
The visitation shall be arranged in line with paragraphs 6.1.1 and
6.1.2 above;
6.2.1.2.
The personal details of each guest and the duration of their stay
shall be included
in the above request;
6.2.1.3.
The relevant Applicant must be present at the residence during the
time that
the sleepover visit takes place;
6.2.1.4.
The relevant Applicant shall be responsible for all costs and
expenses incurred
by his/her guest(s);
6.2.1.5.
The maximum number of sleepover guests may not exceed four guests at
a time;
and
6.2.1.6.
Each sleepover guest will be limited to three consecutive days each.
6.2.2.
Professional carers, night nurses and medical professionals shall be
allowed to sleepover at the residence
of an Applicant requiring such
additional care for that purpose subject to:
6.2.2.1.
Prior arrangement with the access control manager; and
6.2.2.2.
The visitor provides proof of his or her qualification.
6.2.3.
Any general visitor will be allowed without prior notice and/or
consent, if the Applicant they intend to
visit is:
6.2.3.1.
At that stage present in the Park; and
6.2.3.2.
The access control manager has been provided with a medical doctor's
certificate
confirming the Applicant’s illness is of such a
nature that it will be medically unsafe for them to leave the Park
and spend
time with their guests elsewhere.
6.2.3.3.
The visitor shall then only be permitted to visit the specific
Applicant as referred
to in the medical certificate.
6.2.3.4.
The visitor will be a day visitor and must leave the Park by 20:00.
6.2.4.
All medical and emergency staff called to assist any of the
Applicants shall be entitled to enter the Resort
at any stage,
subject to providing the necessary identification.
6.3.
This order does not prevent the First Respondent from permitting
visitors access
in other circumstances.
7.
Save for
the costs occasioned by the hearing of 17 November 2023, the costs
between the Applicants and the First Respondent will
stand over for
later determination.
8.
The
Applicants and the Applicants’ attorneys are required, when
they file their replying affidavit, to explain whether the
Applicants
should pay the Second Respondent’s costs, or whether those
costs should be paid
de
bonis propriis
by
the Applicants’ attorneys.
9.
The
Applicants and the Applicants’ attorneys are required, when
they file their replying affidavit, to explain whether the
Applicants
should pay the First Respondent’s wasted costs of the hearing
of 17 November 2023, or whether those costs should
be paid
de
bonis propriis
by
the Applicants’ attorneys.
M
J BISHOP
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Counsel
for Applicants:
Adv
T Mofokeng
Attorneys
for Applicants:
Sharuh
Attorneys
Counsel
for First Respondent:
Adv
L Theron
Attorneys
for First Respondent:
DVN
Attorneys
Counsel
for
Second Respondent:
Adv
S Shangisa SC
Adv
F Jakoet
Adv
L Rakgwale
Attorneys
for the Second Respondent:
Rahman
Inc
[1]
Constitution
s 27(1)(a).
[2]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2022]
ZACC 44; 2023 (5) BCLR 527 (CC); 2023 (4) SA 325 (CC).
[3]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
[2009] ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC); 2009 (10) BCLR 1014 (CC)
[4]
Ibid at para 24 (footnote omitted).
[5]
See
Dawood
and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[2000] ZACC 8
;
2000 (3) SA 936
(CC);
2000 (8) BCLR 837
(CC).
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