Case Law[2025] ZAKZDHC 16South Africa
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited v Artsolar (Pty) Ltd and Others (D1162/25) [2025] ZAKZDHC 16 (11 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
11 April 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited v Artsolar (Pty) Ltd and Others (D1162/25) [2025] ZAKZDHC 16 (11 April 2025)
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited v Artsolar (Pty) Ltd and Others (D1162/25) [2025] ZAKZDHC 16 (11 April 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL
LAW – Defamation –
Interdict
–
Joinder
– Direct and substantial interest test applied –
Applicant’s statutory role in industrial development
and its
contractual relationship with respondent gave it a legitimate
interest – Public function and right to receive
information
– Interim order was overly broad – Prevented
disclosures to applicant that could be defensible under
qualified
privilege – Reconsideration necessary to uphold applicant’s
statutory and constitutional rights –
Joinder and
reconsideration application granted.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D1162/25
In
the matter between:
THE INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
ARTSOLAR
(PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
BRETT
LATIMER
SECOND RESPONDENT
KANDACE
SINGH
THIRD RESPONDENT
SHALENDRA
HANSRAJ
FOURTH RESPONDENT
BONGANI
HANS
FIFTH RESPONDENT
In
re the matter between:
ARTSOLAR
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
BRETT
LATIMER
FIRST RESPONDENT
KANDACE
SINGH
SECOND RESPONDENT
SHALENDRA
HANSRAJ
THIRD RESPONDENT
BONGANI
HANS
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
P
WALLIS AJ
[1]
The application before me is
interlocutory to an application
instituted by Artsolar (Pty) Ltd (“Artsolar”) against
four respondents. The four respondents
were respectively Brett
Latimer (“Latimer”) (who may fairly be described as the
guiding mind of a customer of Artsolar),
Kandace Singh (“Singh”)
and Shalendra Hansraj (“Hansraj”) (who were both
erstwhile employees of Artsolar),
and Bongani Hans (a journalist).
[2]
In that application, which was
issued on 24 March 2025 for hearing on
26 March 2025, it was (in broad terms) contended by Artsolar that
Latimer, Singh and Hansraj
were defaming Artsolar to
inter alia
Hans. An interdict was sought on 26 March 2025 and an order was
granted on the same date in the following terms:
“
1.
That a rule
nisi
do
hereby issue calling upon the respondents to show cause, if any, to
this court on the 29
th
day of July 2025 why an order in the following terms should not be
granted:
1.1
the respondents are interdicted and restrained from making written or
verbal
defamatory statements concerning the applicant, including by
stating or implying that:
1.1.1
the applicant conducts business unethically or dishonestly;
1.1.2
the applicant defrauded the first respondent
or the first respondent’s company including by
misrepresenting
that alternative electricity generation equipment being solar panels
supplied by the applicant to the first respondent’s
company
were manufactured locally when in truth and in fact they were
manufactured in China;
1.1.3
alleging or implying that the applicant has falsely inflated prices
charged to the first respondent
or any of his companies, in the
supply and/or installation of solar panels.
1.2
That the aforesaid interdict will apply irrespective of to whom the
said defamatory
allegations are made, but in the case of the first to
third respondents, will extend specifically to members of the press,
Bongani
Hans, the Independent Media Group, the International Trade
Administration Commission of South Africa (ITAC), the Industrial
Development
Corporation of South Africa (IDC) and the Department of
Trade, Industry and Competition (DTIC).
1.3
The fourth respondent is interdicted from publishing any such
statements, and
including publishing them as constituting allegations
made by any third party to the effect set out in para 1.1 above.
1.4
That the first to third respondents are directed to pay the costs of
this application
jointly and severally, but in the event of the
application being opposed by the fourth respondent, that all four
respondents are
to pay those costs jointly and severally, on scale C.
2.
Pending the return date or any extension thereof, the provisions of
paragraphs 1.1 to 1.3 above will operate as interim orders with
immediate effect.”
[3]
As mentioned, the application
that served before me was interlocutory
to the application where an order was granted on 26 March 2025. In
this interlocutory application,
the Industrial Development
Corporation of South Africa Limited (“IDC”) seeks:
(a)
an urgent hearing;
(b)
to be joined as the fifth respondent
in the main application; and
(c)
a reconsideration of the order granted
on 26 March 2025 so as to
delete the reference to the IDC in paragraph 1.3 of the Order.
[4]
The reconsideration is limited
only to the rule nisi and interim
relief. It is not finally dispositive any matter - whether between
the named parties, or between
Artsolar and the IDC.
[5]
The interlocutory application
was issued on 3 April 2025 for a
hearing on 9 April 2025. By the date of hearing Artsolar had filed
what was described as a preliminary
answering affidavit. In court on
9 April 2025 I was advised by Mr Broster (who appeared for the IDC)
that the IDC did not intend
to file a replying affidavit and regarded
the matter as ripe for hearing.
[6]
Consequently, on 9 April 2025
I was required to consider the
following three questions:
(a)
was the matter sufficiently urgent
to justify a hearing on 9 April
2025;
(b)
was a case made by the IDC for its
joinder as fifth respondent in the
main application; and
(c)
was a case made by the IDC for reconsideration
in the terms that it
sought.
[7]
As set out in argument for Artsolar
(by Mr Stokes SC who appeared
together with Mr Shapiro SC), the reconsideration question includes a
question of whether a party
that is not originally cited is entitled
to invoke the provisions of uniform rule 6(12)(c) in pursuit of a
reconsideration.
[8]
The questions set out above must
necessarily be sequentially
answered. Put simply: if the matter is not urgent then it is not
necessary to consider the question
of joinder because the matter
ought not to be enrolled, but if the matter is urgent and the joinder
is refused then it is unnecessary
to consider the question of
reconsideration. That being said, the factual basis for each of the
questions is interrelated and,
to some extent, the impact of the
conclusion in the latter questions informs the former.
Urgency
[9]
Assuming for the purposes of
the consideration of urgency that the
application is properly one instituted in accordance with uniform
rule 6(12)(c) a question
arises as to appropriate test for urgency in
reconsideration applications.
[10]
Rule 6(12)(c) itself contains no internal directive
regarding
urgency. That rule simply requires that reconsideration be set down
on notice. The rule is a sub-rule to rule 6(12) which
provides in
6(12)(a) for urgent applications. As a matter of construction, it
seems to me that a party seeking a reconsideration
under 6(12)(c) is
required, if it wishes that the reconsideration be dealt with
urgently, to provide a basis justifying an urgent
hearing for the
reconsideration.
[11]
This accords with the
analysis in
Erasmus
[1]
wherein it is recorded:
“
It
has been held that an application for reconsideration is not urgent
for the purposes of rule 6(12) simply because an order was
granted in
the urgent court. This means that, in the absence of demonstrable
prejudice in the time between when an application
may be heard before
an urgent court and in the ordinary course, a party seeking a
reconsideration must set out the prejudice that
will ensue. The
threshold is the same whether in an application for reconsideration
or when approaching the court under rule 6(12)(a).
In both instances,
the parties seeking relief must set out in clear terms facts duly
supported that will pass the threshold of
‘absence of
substantive relief’ if the matter is not heard before the
urgent court.”
[12]
Erasmus
supports
that contention by reference to an unreported decision in the Gauteng
Court in
Joint
Venture Comprising Gorogang Plant Razz Civils v Infiniti Insurance
Ltd.
[2]
[13]
That approach is
reinforced by the judgment in
Sheriff
Pretoria North-East v Flink and Another
[3]
wherein
Raath
AJ
observed:
“
Nothing
in rule 6(12)(c) suggests that such a respondent would be entitled to
enrol the matter for reconsideration again on an urgent
basis merely
because the order had been obtained on an urgent basis. A proper case
will have to be made out independently for the
urgency of
reconsideration of the order.”
[14]
In contrast, this court
in
United
Medical Devices LLC and Another v Blue Rock Capital Ltd and
Another
[4]
held as follows:
“
As
stated, the purpose of rule 6(12)(c) is to allow parties who were not
present when an urgent
ex
parte
order
is made, to approach the court for reconsideration of the order and
to place facts before the court. To permit the respondents
to
themselves now claim lack of urgency on the part of the applicants
would undermine
audi
alteram partem
which
rule 6(12)(c) gives effect to.”
[15]
It seems to me that the approach of the KwaZulu-Natal
Court
recognises implicitly that a party who has obtained an
ex parte
order (which for the purposes of the question of urgency I assume
to have been wrongly obtained) ought not to be permitted to benefit
from that order merely because the matter was initially heard
ex
parte
. Such an approach would be to encourage
ex parte
applications in the hope that court procedure and overburdened
court rolls would secure a benefit to which the
ex parte
applicant
was never entitled.
[16]
The IDC’s case for urgency is somewhat tersely
set out and may
be summarised as follows:
(a)
there is a potential for significant
harm to the mandate and
reputation of the IDC given the sum of over R90 million advanced by
the IDC to Artsolar;
(b)
the potential harm extends beyond the
IDC affecting the public at
large and the South African economy and the IDC goal of localising
the production of products of this
nature; and
(c)
the order will have the effect of delaying
the investigation of the
complaint to the IDC about Artsolar beyond the ninety day period
requested by the Department of Trade,
Industry and Competition
(“DTIC”).
[17]
Artsolar disputes that the harm will arise and particularly
disputes
that the ninety day period is of any great moment given that it is
“self-imposed”.
[18]
Even if I were to accept that the period is self-imposed,
it appears
to me that courts should incentivise proactive investigation by
organs of State and State owned companies rather than
imposing
impediments upon such investigations.
[19]
It also appears to me that the issues arising in this
particular
application are narrow in scope and primarily of a legal nature.
Consequently, there is only a limited prejudice, if
any, to be
suffered by Artsolar arising from truncated time periods for the
filing of an answering affidavit. Even if the answering
affidavit is
styled “preliminary”, it is unclear to me what further
facts might have been placed before the court (assuming
that any were
permissible given the form or reconsideration) even had a longer
period been provided for.
[20]
In having regard to the various contentions as relates
to urgency, I
ultimately conclude that it would be appropriate to adopt the
approach of
Pullinger AJ
in the
Joint Venture Comprising
Gorogang Plant Razz Civils and Others
matter wherein at paragraph
6 after endorsing the proposition that a reconsideration is not
automatically urgent, the court nonetheless
adopted the position that
it was:
“…
not
inclined to strike this matter from the roll and [instead] preferred
to address the merits of the matter as all the papers are
before me,
[because] I have heard full argument in relation to both the
procedural aspects and the merits and therefore there is
no good
reason to burden another court in the circumstances.”
[21]
It seems to me that the same approach should be adopted
here because,
even if the case for urgency advanced by the IDC is somewhat limited,
it is nonetheless a more appropriate use of
judicial resources, and a
more appropriate balancing of the rights of the parties to consider
the application on the merits than
to ascribe strictly to procedural
rules relating to urgency.
Request
to join as respondent
[22]
The IDC case for joinder culminates in paragraph 22
of the founding
affidavit which reads:
“
Given
the fact that the IDC has a direct and substantial interest in the
order sought by Artsolar, the IDC ought to have been joined
to these
proceedings and is entitled to an order to be joined to these
proceedings as the fifth respondent.”
[23]
That paragraph is predicated upon an earlier discursus
in which the
IDC sets out that:
(a)
it received a whistleblower complaint;
and
(b)
it wishes to conduct an investigation
into that complaint (which is
said already to have been commenced).
[24]
In contrast Artsolar contends that:
(a)
the IDC has no legal interest in receiving
defamatory allegations
(and it posits that the original court order necessarily included a
prima facie
finding that the statements were defamatory); and
(b)
allied to that contention it is argued
that the IDC’s position
is that of a private contracting party and not a public authority
with any investigative rights or
obligations.
[25]
The applicable test for
intervention has been set out in detail by the Constitutional Court
in
South
African Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and Others
[5]
where that court held:
“
[9]
It is now settled that an applicant for intervention must meet the
direct and
substantial interest test in order to succeed. What
constitutes a direct and substantial interest is the legal interest
in
the subject-matter of the case which could be prejudicially
affected by the order of the Court. This means that the
applicant
must show that it has a right adversely affected or likely
to be affected by the order sought. But the applicant does not have
to satisfy the court at the stage of intervention that it will
succeed. It is sufficient for such applicant to make
allegations
which, if proved, would entitle it to relief.
[10]
If the applicant shows that it has some right which is affected
by the order
issued, permission to intervene must be granted.
For it is a basic principle of our law that no order should be
granted against
a party without affording such party a pre decision
hearing. This is so fundamental that an order is generally
taken
to be binding only on parties to the litigation.
[11]
Once the applicant for intervention shows a direct and substantial
interest in the
subject-matter of the case, the court ought to grant
leave to intervene. In
Greyvenouw CC
this
principle was formulated in these terms:
“
In
addition, when, as in this matter, the applicants base their claim to
intervene on a direct and substantial interest in the subject-matter
of the dispute, the Court has no discretion: it must allow them to
intervene because it should not proceed in the absence of parties
having such legally recognised interests.”"
[26]
In my view, the opposition to joinder loses sight of
two key aspects.
[27]
Firstly, s16(1)(b) of the constitution, 1996 provides:
“
Everyone
has the right to freedom of expression, which includes –
(b)
freedom to receive or impart information or ideas.”
[28]
Although not every right in the bill of rights applies
to juristic
persons, on the facts of this matter (and taking into account the
juristic persons such as media organisations have
previously asserted
rights under s16) I see no reason why the IDC ought not be able to
invoke the right to receive information
or ideas as identified in
s16(1)(b) of the constitution. This then is the starting point for
the consideration of whether any rights
of IDC are affected.
[29]
Furthermore, it is not in
my view correct, as contended for by Artsolar, to treat the IDC as
simply another lending institution
with private law contractual
rights. Plainly, the IDC does have such private law rights but it
also fulfils a function different
to that fulfilled by other
commercial lenders. The IDC was established by statute
[6]
and its objects as set out in s3 include:
“
(b)
To facilitate, promote, guide and assist in the financing of:
(i)
new industries and
industrial, or ancillary or related economic,
undertakings; and
(ii)
schemes for the expansion, better
organisation and modernisation of
and the more efficient carrying out of operations in existing
industries and industrial, or ancillary
or related economic,
undertakings
to
the end that the economic requirements of the Republic may be met and
industrial development within the Republic, Southern African
region
and the rest of Africa may be planned, expedited and conducted on
sound business principles;
(g)
to encourage the creation of new knowledge based industries and
services
in the establishment and growth of new technology based
firms; and
(h)
to enhance corporate governance so as to achieve business
excellence.”
[30]
Whilst, as Artsolar correctly contends, the loan agreements
concluded
between the IDC and Artsolar do not expressly identify that Artsolar
was to effect local production of solar panels,
the IDC alleges
directly that:
“
The
primary purpose of this funding was to enable Artsolar to install the
latest technology manufacturing plant/line and machinery
for the
local production of the latest technology photovoltaic modules (solar
panels) such as the 550W photovoltaic modules.”
[31]
An investment for the purpose identified by the IDC
would accord with
the stated objects of the IDC as encapsulated in legislation.
[32]
The combination of the right under s16(1)(b) and the
statutory
objects of the IDC is such, in my view, as to make clear that the IDC
has a direct and substantial interest in the application.
[33]
Having regard to what I have set out above, I am satisfied
that the
IDC has a right to be joined in the application.
[34]
Artsolar also contends that there is in effect no harm
suffered by
the IDC because it has other private law contractual entitlements to
conduct inspections and to have sight of Artsolar’s
documents
and factory.
[35]
That last point is in my view not helpful in the question
of joinder
since as the Constitutional Court pointed out in
South
African Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and Others
matter where a party asserts “
some
right which is affected by the order issued, permission to intervene
must be granted.”
Reconsideration
[36]
Having thus determined both that the matter should be
entertained as
one of urgency and that in the first instance the IDC ought to have
been joined in the application, all that remains
is a question of
whether the IDC’s requested reconsideration should be upheld or
rejected.
[37]
Artsolar contends that it is not open to the IDC to
invoke Rule
6(12)(c) because, as I understand the argument, the IDC was not a
party at the hearing and thus was not a party in
whose absence an
Order was granted. I do not accept that argument. Firstly, the rule
appears to me to be wide enough to accommodate
a person who has
successfully contended for their joinder even if not originally
cited. Secondly, once it is accepted that a party
enjoyed a right to
be joined, any formalistic approach to the rules must necessarily be
eschewed in favour of an approach that
does justice.
[38]
The approach to
reconsideration has been settled by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Afgri
Grain Marketing (Pty) Ltd v Trustees for the time being of Copenship
Bulkers A/S (in liquidation) and Others
[7]
which held:
“
[12]
Rule
6(12)
(c)
does
not prescribe how an application for reconsideration is to be
pursued. The absence of prescription was intentional and the
procedure will vary depending upon the basis on which the party
applying for reconsideration seeks relief against the order
granted
ex
parte
and
in its absence. A party wishing to have the order set aside, on the
ground that the papers did not make a case for that relief,
may
deliver a notice to this effect and set the matter down, for argument
and reconsideration, on those papers. It may do the same
if it merely
wishes certain provisions in the order to be amended, or qualified,
or supplemented. The matter is then argued on
the original papers. It
is not open to the original applicant, save possibly in the most
exceptional circumstances, or where the
need to do this has been
foreshadowed in the original founding affidavit, to bolster its
original application by filing a supplementary
founding
affidavit.”
[8]
[13]
The party seeking reconsideration is not confined to this route. It
may file an answering
affidavit, either traversing the entire case
against it, or restricted to certain issues relevant to the
reconsideration. In many
instances such an affidavit will be
desirable
[9]
. Even if an
affidavit is filed, however, it does not preclude the party seeking
reconsideration arguing at the outset, on
the basis of the
application papers alone, that the applicant has not made out a case
for relief. That is a well-established entitlement
in application
proceedings
[10]
and
there is no reason why it should not be adopted in reconsideration
applications.
[11]
[14]
If an affidavit is filed in support of the application for
reconsideration then the
party that obtained the order is entitled to
deliver a reply thereto, subject to the usual limitations applicable
to replying affidavits.
When that is done, and the party seeking
reconsideration does not argue a preliminary point at the outset that
the founding affidavit
did not make out a case for relief, the case
must be argued on all the factual material before the judge dealing
with the reconsideration
proceedings
[12]
.That
material may be significantly more extensive and the nature of the
issues may have changed as a result of the execution of
the
original
ex
parte
order.
[13]
”
[39]
The approach of the IDC falls somewhat in between the
two approaches
identified by the Supreme Court of Appeal. While the IDC did file an
affidavit (thus placing itself somewhat outside
the form of
reconsideration that proceeds only on the founding papers) it did so
primarily to adduce evidence in support of its
intervention rather
than in support of the reconsideration. Further, an answering
affidavit (albeit preliminary) has been filed
by Artsolar, and
additionally Latimer, Singh and Hansraj have filed comprehensive
answering affidavits. It follows that the material
before this court
is not quite the same material as was before the court hearing the
main application in the first instance.
[40]
At this point, it is appropriate to return to the order
that was
granted by the court hearing the matter in the first instance.
[41]
Mr Stokes contended that there can be no entitlement
on the part of
the IDC to receive defamatory information and consequently that the
IDC could not assert that any legitimate right
had been infringed by
the terms of the order. That submission is seductive in its
simplicity but, in my view, cannot be adopted
without qualification.
[42]
The first qualification is one of law; which is to note
that there
are circumstances in which defamatory statements might legitimately
be made. These include all of the various forms
of qualified
privilege, as well as circumstances peculiar to the press, or where
it can be contended that the statements are both
true and for the
public benefit, There is thus no absolute right to be protected from
being the subject of defamatory allegations.
[43]
The allegations which are precluded under the original
order include
either direct statements or implications that Artsolar conducts its
business unethically or dishonestly; and allegations
relating to
where solar panels were represented to have been made as opposed to
where they were in fact made; as well as further
allegations relating
to representations as to price.
[44]
In the context of the objects of the IDC, and the alleged
purpose of
the loan, it appears to me at least
prima facie
that
disclosures of the nature interdicted (assuming that they were
truthful) would be defensible either as being truthful and
for the
public benefit or as a form of qualified privilege. For that reason,
merely on principles of law I would grant the reconsideration.
[45]
There is however a further practical reason why the
reconsideration
should be granted. That is because upon an analysis of the order from
the perspective of the IDC it prohibits plainly
permissible
statements that could be made by Latimer, Singh and Hansraj to the
IDC. By way of example, and assuming without finding
that the facts
supported these statements, it would in my view not be defamatory for
the three principal respondents to make the
following statements to
the IDC:
(a)
the solar panels installed by the applicant
were said by the
applicant to be manufactured in South Africa; but
(b)
factually the solar panels are manufactured
in China; and
(c)
the solar panels would not have been
purchased had it been known that
the panels were manufactured in China and not in South Africa; and
(d)
the principal respondents believe that
Artsolar both knew that its
representation was wrong and further knew that the representation was
relied upon.
[46]
If those statements can
bona fide
and honestly be made by the
first to third respondents, then I can see no grounds for prohibiting
them. However, the necessary implication
of those statements would be
that:
(a)
Artsolar conducts business unethically
or dishonestly; and
(b)
Artsolar defrauded the first respondent’s
company.
[47]
The order as presently framed precludes disclosures
to the IDC that
may have that implication. In my view, such a prohibition is not
justified.
[48]
Further, the founding affidavit in the original application
made no
real case (as against the IDC) that disclosures, even defamatory
ones, could not be cured by a suitable alternative remedy
in the form
of damages claimable against a party making untrue and defamatory
allegations. There was also no examination in the
original founding
papers of the balance of harm
vis a vis
the IDC. For that
reason also, I hold that the reconsideration is well founded because
no case for interdictory relief was made
out in the original founding
papers
vis a vis
the IDC.
[49]
As to costs, I see no reason why costs ought not to
follow the
result. Artsolar instructed two senior counsel which reflects the
gravity of the matter and in my view, it would be
appropriate to
award costs on scale C. Because this application is only
interlocutory, rather than final, the costs are only those
occasioned
by the hearing on 9 April 2025.
[50]
For the reasons set out above, I grant the following
order:
(a)
the Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited is
granted leave
to intervene and is hereby joined as a fifth respondent
under Case No. D1162/25;
(b)
the order granted on 26 March 2025 be and hereby is reconsidered by
deletion
in paragraph 1.2 thereof of the words “the Industrial
Development Corporation of South Africa (IDC)”;
(c)
Artsolar (Pty) Ltd is to pay the costs of Industrial Development
Corporation
of South Africa Limited occasioned by the hearing on 9
April 2025 on scale C.
P Wallis AJ
Appearances
Counsel for IDC:
Adv JP Broster
Attorneys of IDC:
Pather and Pather
Attorneys
Ref: Edward
Abraham/CR/I292
Counsel for
Artsolar (Pty) Ltd:
Adv A Stokes SC and
Adv W N Shapiro SC
Attorneys for
Artsolar (Pty) Ltd:
Macgregor Erasmus
Attorneys Inc
Ref:
R
Erasmus & JM Klingbiel/SV/ART1/0008
[1]
Erasmus,
Superior
Court Practice, Second Edition, D1 – Rule 6-62: Service 25,
2024
[2]
[2024]
ZAGP JHC 1048 (15 October 2024)
[3]
[2005]
JOL 14761 (T)
[4]
(13398/2015)
[2016] ZAKZDHC 12 (4 March 2016) at [42]
[5]
2017
(5) SA 1 (CC)
[6]
Industrial
Development Corporation Act No. 22 of 1940
[7]
2024
(1) SA 373 (SCA)
[8]
Basil
Read (Pty) Ltd v Nedbank Ltd and Another
2012
(6) SA 514
(GSJ)
para 37.
[9]
ISDN
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSDN Solutions CC and Others
1996
(4) SA 484
(W)
at 487C-D
[10]
Bader
and Another v Weston and Another
1967
(1) SA 134
(C)
at 136B-C;
Aspek
Pipe Co (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mauerberger and Others
1968
(1) SA 517
(C)
at 519E-F;
Hart
v Pinetown Drive-Inn Cinema (Pty) Ltd
1972
(1) SA 464
(D)
at 465E-G.
[11]
It
was adopted in
Lourenco
and Others v Ferela (Pty) Ltd and Others (No 1)
1998
(3) SA 281
(W) at 291B-G.
[12]
Oosthuizen
v Mijs
2009
(6) SA 266
(W)
at 269H-J.
[13]
The
Reclamation Group (Pty) Ltd v Smit and Others
2004
(1) SA 215
(SE)
at 218D-F.
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