Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 72South Africa
Limitless Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maximprops 1007 CC and Another (D7969/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 72 (18 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
30 September 2022
Headnotes
as a deposit by the second respondent (acting in their capacity as conveyancers). The interest which would have accrued on the R1 million would be for the benefit of the first respondent. [2] The very narrow issue which serves before me is whether the agreement contemplates that interest which would accrue on the balance of the purchase price is to be paid to the applicant or the first respondent. [3] It is common cause that the singular determination to be made in the application in respect of the above issue is an interpretation of clause 2.2 of the agreement. I turn to this issue further on in this
Judgment
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## Limitless Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maximprops 1007 CC and Another (D7969/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 72 (18 October 2024)
Limitless Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maximprops 1007 CC and Another (D7969/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 72 (18 October 2024)
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sino date 18 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D7969/2022
In
the matter between:
LIMITLESS
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MAXIMPROPS
1007 CC
First Respondent
LESTER
HALL FLETCHER INC
Second Respondent
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The late delivery of the applicant's replying affidavit is condoned.
2.
The applicant is directed to pay the respondents' costs of the
opposed condonation application
on Scale B, such costs to include the
costs of senior counsel where employed.
3.
The application is dismissed.
4.
The applicant is directed to pay the respondents' costs of the
application, on Scale C, such
costs to include the costs of senior
counsel where employed.
JUDGMENT
Veerasamy
AJ
Introduction
[1]
On or about 28 July 2021 the applicant and the first respondent
concluded a written agreement
of sale in respect of a property
situated at Gowrie Farm, Golf & Flyfishing Estate, in Nottingham
Road ("the property").
It is common cause between the
parties that a total purchase price of R15 million was paid by the
applicant with R1 million of
such funds being held as a deposit by
the second respondent (acting in their capacity as conveyancers). The
interest which would
have accrued on the R1 million would be for the
benefit of the first respondent.
[2]
The very narrow issue which serves before me is whether the agreement
contemplates that interest
which would accrue on the balance of the
purchase price is to be paid to the applicant or the first
respondent.
[3]
It is common cause that the singular determination to be made in the
application in respect of
the above issue is an interpretation of
clause 2.2 of the agreement. I turn to this issue further on in this
judgment.
[4]
Prior to the hearing of the opposed application, the applicant
delivered an application seeking
condonation for the late delivery of
its replying affidavit. This was opposed by both respondents.
[5]
I intend to deal with the application for condonation first.
Condonation
for the late filing of the replying affidavit
[6]
The principal application was instituted on or about 4 August 2022.
The answering affidavit was
delivered on 30 September 2022. The
applicant delivered its replying affidavit on 26 February 2024, being
16 months and 28 days
after delivery of the answering affidavit.
[7]
In its application for condonation, the applicant's deponent, Ms Kim
Hulett, explains the aforementioned
delay in delivering the replying
affidavit as follows:
(a)
There were "tremendous
delays
" with obtaining the
evidence of Mr Daniel Raath, whose evidence was needed to respond to
allegations in the answering affidavit.
Mr Raath, it is alleged, had
emigrated to Australia. No detail is given of what steps were taken
to obtain his evidence and what
the hurdles were which contributed to
the delay.
(b)
During the second half of 2022, Ms Hulett's godson was diagnosed with
multiple sclerosis and attending
to his needs at the time prevented
her from attending to the replying affidavit with any greater
expedition. No detail is given
of how this event contributed to the
delay.
(c)
During or about July 2023, Mr Hulett's ex-husband was involved in a
serious motorcycle accident
in Namibia. As a result of his accident,
she had to further attend to his needs and that of her children which
also involved her
assuming sole parental responsibilities whilst her
ex-husband remained incapacitated. No detail is given of how this has
contributed
to the delay.
(d)
There had been significant disruptions in the activities of Next Bio
Sciences (Pty) Ltd, of which
Ms Hulett alleges she is the founder and
Chief Executive Officer. She only finalised the handover of her role
in the company in
September 2023. Ms Hulett alleges that her time was
further taken up by roles she serves at various institutions such as
the Faculty
of the Singularity University, the investment committee
of One Bio, the board of directors of the National Heritage Project
NPC
and as an investment director in the Wild Earth Group. No detail
is given of how this has contributed to the delay.
(e)
Ms Hulett advises that it was only after settlement negotiations in
November and December 2023
failed, that she proceeded to prepare her
replying affidavit.
[8]
Ms Hulett's explanation for the applicant's delay in delivering its
replying affidavit timeously
is sparse, to say the least. She
provides the court with an overview of the events that distracted her
but no detailed explanation
has been given as to why it has taken 16
months and 28 days to deliver a replying affidavit.
[9]
The respondents argue that the replying affidavit falls to be
disregarded, not only because of
the excessive delay but, further,
because the applicant now seeks to rely on inadmissible evidence.
[10]
The respondents did not deliver any notice of an irregular step when
the replying affidavit was delivered. Nor was there any
suggestion
during the hearing that in the event this court granted condonation,
then the respondents wished to deliver an application
to strike out
the inadmissible evidence in the replying affidavit. Mr
Harpur
SC
who appeared for the respondents adopted, correctly so, a very
pragmatic approach being that should condonation be granted, then
the
court would be invited
to
merely disregard the evidence which was inadmissible.
[11]
Ms
Brammer
, who appeared for the applicant, in her argument in
the main application limited herself to the evidence contained in the
founding
affidavit, thus avoiding any further disputes regarding
which evidence in the replying affidavit was inadmissible and may be
considered
by the court.
[12]
In the current proceedings, strict adherence to the Uniform Rule
relating to the timeframes for the delivery
of a replying affidavit
would give rise to a substantial injustice.
[1]
[13]
In the matter under consideration all the papers are before me in the
matters ready to be dealt with. To
uphold an argument that the
replying affidavit falls to be disregarded because it was filed out
of time would be a formalistic
exercise in futility and would leave
the parties to commence the proceedings on the same facts de nova.
This
does not appear to me to be in the interests of justice.
[2]
[14]
The absence of a rule 30 notice regarding the setting aside of
irregular proceedings and the respondents'
preparedness to argue the
matter on the day on its merits fortifies my view that neither party
is ultimately prejudiced by the
late filing of the replying
affidavit.
[15]
The applicant concedes that it seeks an indulgence from the court in
respect of the replying affidavit. That
indulgence must come at a
price, especially in circumstances where the applicant has provided
an anaemic explanation for the delay.
The applicant's problems are
further compounded by the fact that the replying affidavit was
incomplete, and the applicant sought
to hand up documents omitted
from the replying affidavit on the day of the hearing.
[16]
Whilst I am inclined to granted condonation, the applicant must pay
the respondents' costs of the opposed application for condonation
on
Scale B.
The
interpretation of clause 2.2 of the sale agreement
[17]
The manner in which the purchase price was to be dealt with is
regulated by clause 2 of the sale agreement. Of importance to
these
proceedings is the interpretation of clause 2.2 which, at the time
that the agreement was signed, read as follows:
The
Purchaser shall lodge with the conveyancers, either a guarantee
acceptable to them or, alternatively, cash for the balance of
the
purchase price within 10 days of the date of the Purchaser's
signature to this agreement. Any such cash paid by the Purchaser
shall be held by the conveyancers in accordance with the provisions
of clause 2.1 above.'
[18]
Clause 2.1 of the sale agreement reads as follows:
The
Purchaser shall lodge a non-refundable deposit of R1 000 000 with
Lester Hall, Fletcher Inc ('the conveyancers') within 7 days
of the
sale agreement being concluded, which sum shall be retained by the
conveyancers in trust in an interest-bearing account
upon their
standard terms applicable to corporate saver accounts with interest
accruing to the Seller pending transfer. Payments
to the conveyancers
shall be made in cash by cheque or alternatively by direct deposit to
the following account ...'
[19]
In the sale agreement, the portion of clause 2.1 which originally
read
" ...to corporate saver accounts with interest accruing
to the purchaser pending transfer"
was amended in manuscript
to delete the word
"purchaser"
and to insert the
word
"Seller"
.
[20]
Equally, in clause 2.2 the original formulation of the clause which
read,
inter alia, "... cash for the balance of the purchase
price within 30 days of the date of the Purchaser's signature ..."
was amended by deletion of the number '30' and the insertion of the
number'
10
' in manuscript.
[21]
On or about 10 August 2024, the applicant and the first respondent
concluded the first addendum. The first
addendum consisted of three
clauses. For the purposes of this application clauses 1 and 2 are
instructive.
[22]
Clause 1 reads as follows:
'The
non-refundable deposit referred to in clause 2.1 of the agreement
shall be paid by 13
Th
August 2021.'
[23]
Clause 2 of the first addendum reads as follows:
'The
Purchaser shall supply an acceptable Bank guarantee for R14 000
000.00 (Fourteen Million Rand) by 25
th
August 2021.'
[24]
The applicant could not provide the bank guarantee by 25 August 2021
which resulted in a second addendum
being concluded between the
parties. The second addendum consists of three clauses, with clause 1
reading as follows:
'Clause
2.2 of the Agreement and Addendum is hereby amended to reflect that
the Purchaser shall secure payment of the balance of
the purchase
price in cash before 25 September 2021.'
[25]
The applicant contends that clause 1 of the second addendum amounts
to a complete deletion and substitution
of the existing clause 2.2 as
amended by the first addendum.
[26]
The respondents contend that the second addendum merely amended
clause 2.2 to reflect the payment of the
purchase price by 25
September 2021. They argue that the rest of clause 2.2 remained
operative and in particular the sentence which
reads as follows:
'Any
such cash paid by the Purchaser shall be held by the conveyancers in
accordance with the provisions of 2.1 above.'
[27]
It is common cause between the parties that the balance of the
purchase price in the sum of R 14 million
was paid into the second
respondent's trust account and that interest has accrued on such
payment.
[28]
Ms
Brammer
argues that it was never the intention of the
parties for the interest which accrued on the R14 million payment to
accrue for the
benefit of the first respondent. She submits that the
parties had never contemplated interest on the balance of the
purchase price
because at all material times the balance of the
purchase price was to be secured by a bank guarantee.
[29]
Ms
Brammer
submitted that the context of providing a bank
guarantee evidences that it was never the intention of the parties
for interest
on the balance of the purchase price to be paid to the
seller and that this was never within the contemplation of the
parties.
Thus, when the second addendum was signed the applicant
argues that it and the first respondent were ad idem that interest on
the
R14 million would not be payable to the first respondent.
[30]
In support of this argument, the applicant relies upon an email which
Ms Hulett had sent on 25 August 2021
being the day before she signed
the second addendum. In the final paragraph of her email, Ms Hulett
states the following:
'In
any event, this deal has left me with a really bad taste in my mouth.
Despite this, I will arrange transfer and deposit into
your
conveyancers trust account (interest for my account). Once this has
taken place I will expect occupation within one week.
Please
confirm.'
[31]
In paragraph 37 of her founding affidavit, Ms Hulett alleges that Mr
Rowles confirmed receipt of the aforementioned
email in a telephonic
conversation they had the very same day (being 25 August 2021).
[32]
Mr Rowles is the deponent to the respondents' answering affidavit. In
paragraphs 25, 26 and 29 of his answering
affidavits, Mr Rowles
denies Ms Hulett's interpretation of the second addendum. He submits
that there was never any agreement that
interest on the balance of
the purchase price would accrue to the applicant and in fact the
second addendum was not intended to
reflect same.
[33]
He alleges that Ms Hulett signed the second addendum without asking
for any amendment to reflect such interest
would accrue to the
applicant.
[34]
Mr
Harpur
SC correctly submits that if the applicant is to succeed, then it
must do so on the respondents' version
[3]
and that on the respondents' version, there was never an agreement
for interest to accrue to the applicant and that Ms Hulett's
email
did not translate into such an agreement.
[35]
Ms
Brammer
submitted that there was no benefit to be gained by
the applicant in giving up interest on the balance of the purchase
price. She
submitted that the agreement contemplated that the deposit
was paid as a genuine pre-estimate of damages which the first
respondent
would suffer if the transfer did not proceed because of
the applicant's breach of the agreement. It was a mechanism to secure
the
agreement. She submitted that no similar benefit accrued to the
applicant in giving up the interest on the balance of the purchase
price.
[36]
Mr
Harpur
, however, contended that the benefit for the
applicant in fact arose from the rent-free occupation which the
applicant gained before
the transfer.
[37]
In paragraph 4.3 of his answering affidavit, Mr Rowles alleges that
the seller was prepared to forego occupational
rental and levies
until registration of transfer with the obvious commercial rationale
being that it would have been entitled to
the interest on the balance
of the purchase price. He contends that this ultimately is what
transpired since the interest which
the applicant is asking for is
close to the amount which would have been payable as occupational
rental.
[38]
In
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court cautioned that admission of contextual
evidence whilst forming part of an interpretive exercise was not
limitless. At paragraph 68 of the judgment Justice Khampepe held the
following:
'Let
me clarify that what I say here does not mean that extrinsic evidence
is always admissible. It is true that a court's recourse
to extrinsic
evidence is not limitless because "interpretation is a matter of
law and not of fact and, accordingly, interpretation
is a matter for
the court and not for witnesses". It is also true that "to
the extent that evidence may be admissible
to contextualise the
document (since 'context is everything') to establish its factual
matrix or purpose or for purposes of identification,
one must use it
as conservatively as possible". I must, however, make it clear
that this does not detract from the injunction
on courts to consider
evidence of context and purpose. Where, in a given case, reasonable
people may disagree on the admissibility
of the contextual evidence
in question, the unitary approach to contractual interpretation
enjoins a court to err on the side of
admitting the evidence. There
would, of course, still be sufficient checks against any undue reach
of such evidence because the
court dealing with the evidence could
still disregard it on the basis that it lacks weight. When dealing
with evidence in this
context, it is important not to conflate
admissibility and weight.' (Footnotes omitted.)
[39]
In
Novartis
SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading (Pty) Ltd
[5]
the Supreme Court of Appeal ('the SCA") held at paragraph 27:
'I
do not understand these judgments to mean that interpretation is a
process that takes into account only the objective meaning
of the
words (if that is ascertainable), and does not have regard to the
contract as a whole or the circumstances in which it was
entered
into. This court has consistently held, for many decades, that the
interpretative process is one of ascertaining the intention
of the
parties - what they meant to achieve. And in doing that, the court
must consider all the circumstances surrounding the contract
to
determine what their intention was in concluding it.
KPMG
, in
the passage cited, explains that parol evidence is inadmissible to
modify, vary or add to the written terms of the agreement,
and that
it is the role of the court, and not witnesses, to interpret a
document. It adds, importantly, that there is no real distinction
between background circumstances, and surrounding circumstances, and
that a court should always consider the factual matrix in
which the
contract is concluded - the context - to determine the parties'
intention.'
[40]
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni
[6]
the SCA held at paragraph 18:
'Over
the last century there have been significant developments in the law
relating to the interpretation of documents, both in
this country and
in others that follow similar rules to our own. It is unnecessary to
add unduly to the burden of annotations by
trawling through the case
law on the construction of documents in order to trace those
developments. The relevant authorities are
collected and summarised
in
Bastian Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v General Hendrik Schoeman
Primary School
. The present state of the law can be expressed as
follows: Interpretation is the process of attributing meaning to the
words used
in a document, be it legislation, some other statutory
instrument, or contract, having regard to the context provided by
reading
the particular provision or provisions in the light of the
document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming
into existence. Whatever the nature of the document, consideration
must be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary
rules
of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision appears;
the apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material
known
to those responsible for its production. Where more than one meaning
is possible each possibility must be weighed in the
light of all
these factors. The process is objective, not subjective. A sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to
insensible or
unbusinesslike results or undermines the apparent purpose of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against,
the temptation
to substitute what they regard as reasonable, sensible or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in
regard to a
statute or statutory instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation; in a contractual context
it is to
make a contract for the parties other than the one they in fact made.
The "inevitable point of departure is the language
of the
provision itself', read in context and having regard to the purpose
of the provision and the background to the preparation
and production
of the document.' (Footnotes omitted.)
[41]
In
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd and Another
[7]
the SCA held at paragraph 39:
'First,
the integration (or parol evidence) rule remains part of our law.
However, it is frequently ignored by practitioners and
seldom
enforced by trial courts. If a document was intended to provide a
complete memorial of a jural act, extrinsic evidence may
not
contradict, add to or modify its meaning (
Johnson v Leal
1980
(3) SA 927
(A) at 943B). Second, interpretation is a matter of law
and not of fact and, accordingly, interpretation is a matter for the
court
and not for witnesses (or, as said in common-law jurisprudence,
it is not a jury question: Hodge M Malek (ed)
Phipson on Evidence
(16 ed 2005) paras 33-64). Third, the rules about admissibility of
evidence in this regard do not depend on the nature of the document,
whether statute, contract or patent (
Johnson & Johnson (Pty)
Ltd v Kimberly-Clark Corporation
1985 BP 126 (A) ([1985] ZASCA
132 (at www.saflii.org.za)). Fourth, to the extent that evidence may
be admissible to contextualise
the document (since "context is
everything") to establish its factual matrix or purpose or for
purposes of identification,
"one must use it as conservatively
as possible" (
Delmas Milling Co Ltd v Du Plessis
1955 (3)
SA 447
(A) at 455B-C). The time has arrived for us to accept that
there is no merit in trying to distinguish between "background
circumstances" and "surrounding circumstances". The
distinction is artificial and, in addition, both terms are vague
and
confusing. Consequently, everything tends to be admitted. The terms
"context" or "factual matrix" ought
to suffice.
(See
Van der Westhuizen v Arnold
2002 (6) SA 453
(SCA) ([2002]
4 All SA 331)
paras 22 and 23, and
Masstores (Pty) Ltd v Murray &
Roberts Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 94
;
[2008 (6) SA 654
(SCA)
para 7.)'
[42]
In
University
of Johannesburg the Constitutional Court affirmed the judgments of
Novartis, Endumeni
and
KPMG
.
[8]
[43]
Evidence may be relevant to the context within which the contract was
concluded and its purpose, irrespective
of whether the text of the
contract is ambiguous, either patently or latently.
[9]
However interpretation is a matter of law and not of fact.
Accordingly, interpretation is a matter for the court and not
witnesses.
[10]
[44]
In its initial incarnation, clause 2.2 of the agreement contemplated
that the purchase price would be paid
by
"either a guarantee"
alternatively
"cash for the balance of the purchase price".
[45]
In the event that the purchase price was to be paid in cash clause
2.2 of the agreement expressly provided
that
"Any such cash
paid by the Purchaser shall be held by the conveyancers in accordance
with clause 2.1 above."
[46]
In terms of clause 2.1 of the agreement, monies were to be held in an
interest- bearing account
"with interest accruing to the
Seller pending transfer".
[47]
Whilst the applicant may have always initially contemplated paying
the purchase price by bank guarantee,
it concluded an agreement in
which at the outset contemplated, as an alternative, that the
purchase price may be paid by cash and
if payment was made in cash
then such monies would be held in an interest bearing account for the
benefit of the Seller.
[48]
Ms
Brammer
conceded during argument that at the outset, before
any addenda had been concluded, the agreement contemplated such an
arrangement.
[49]
This is the context in which the agreement is to be viewed.
[50]
The second addendum sought to amend clause 2.2
"to reflect
that the Purchaser shall secure payment of the balance of the
purchase price in cash before 25 September 2021".
It does
not read as a wholesale deletion and replacement of clause 2.2.
[51]
The evolution of clause 2.2 must be viewed in context. In its
original form clause 2.2 contemplated that
the purchase price would
be paid either by bank guarantee or cash within 10 days of signature
of the agreement.
[52]
The first addendum did not delete clause 2.2. In fact, the first
addendum merely sought to record that the
applicant shall supply an
acceptable bank guarantee for R14 million by 25 August 2021.
[53]
Clause 3 of the first addendum therefore becomes instructive. It
reads as follows:
'The
remainder of the terms and conditions of the sale agreement shall
continue to be in force and effect and should there be any
conflict
between this addendum and the sale agreement then the terms and
conditions of this addendum shall prevail.'
[54]
The only conflict which would have arisen would be in the date for
which the guarantee would have to be provided
in terms of clause 2.2.
[55]
It is only the second addendum which specifically makes direct
reference to an amendment of clause 2.2 and
in that regard, clause
2.2 is amended
"to reflect that the Purchaser shall secure
payment of the balance of the purchase price in cash before 25
September 2021."
[56]
It is merely the date for payment which is altered in clause 2.2. The
remainder of clause 2.2 remains operative.
[57]
The second addendum makes no mention of interest and is silent in
this regard. Thus, how interest on the
balance of the purchase price
is to be dealt with is governed by the remainder of clause 2.2, which
provides that one must look
to clause 2.1. Clause 2.1 in turn
provides that such interest is payable to the Seller.
[58]
If one has for the moment to consider Ms
Brammer's
argument of
"no benefit to the applicant”
, it is abundantly
apparent that there was clearly a benefit to be gained by the
applicant in that it obtained rent-free occupation
of a R15 million
home pending transfer. As the respondents allege, that was the basis
upon which the interest would accrue to the
first respondent.
[59]
Ms Hulett's evidence as to the applicant's intention cannot be
admitted. Such is not evidence of context.
[11]
[60]
Accordingly, I find that in terms of clause 2.2 of the agreement, the
interest is to be paid to the first
respondent in accordance with the
provisions of clause 2.1 of the agreement.
[61]
It accordingly follows that the application cannot succeed. It
further follows that the respondents have
been substantially
successful in these proceedings. As such the respondents are entitled
to their costs.
Order
[62]
Having considered the papers and submissions before me, I make the
following order:
1.
The late delivery of the applicant's replying affidavit is condoned.
2.
The applicant is directed to pay the respondents' costs of the
opposed condonation application
on Scale B, such costs to include the
costs of senior counsel where employed.
3.
The application is dismissed.
4.
The applicant is directed to pay the respondents' costs of the
application, on Scale C, such
costs to include the costs of senior
counsel where employed.
I
VEERASAMY AJ
HEARD ON:
11 October 2024
JUDGMENT DATE:
18 October 2024
FOR THE APPLICANT:
B Brammer
INSTRUCTED BY:
Gary G Mazaham
Attorneys
Hunts End Office
Park
1
st
Floor, Paddock View
36 Wierda Road West
Wierda Valley
Sandton
Tel:
011 783 4441
Ref: G
van Staden/GL0080
Email:
garyv@mazaham.co.za
c/o
Mooney Ford
Attorneys
3
rd
Floor, The Boulevard
19
Park Lane, Parkside, Gateway
Tel:
031 304 9881
Email:
ashton@mfp.co.za
info@mfp.co.za
FOR THE
RESPONDENTS:
GD Harpur SC
INSTRUCTED BY:
Lester Hall,
Fletcher Inc
44 Old Main Road,
Kloof
KwaZulu
Natal
Tel:
031 818 7280
Email:
chris@lesterhall.co.za
roslyn@lesterhall.co.za
c/o
Johan Jooste and Co
32 Dullar Omar Road
Masonic Grove,
Durban
Tel: 031 305 4242
[1]
Hart
and Another v Nelson
2000 (4) SA 368
(E) at 374G-375F.
[2]
Pangbourne
Properties Ltd v Pulse Moving CC and Another
2013 (3) SA 140
(GSJ) paras 17-19.
[3]
Plascon
Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634A-I.
[4]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
2021 (6) SA 1 (CC).
[5]
Novartis
SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading (Pty) Ltd
2016
(1) SA 518 (SCA).
[6]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA).
[7]
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd and Another
2009 (4) SA 399 (SCA).
[8]
Minister
for Transport and Public Works: WC and Others v Adonisi and
Others
2024 (4) SA 499
(SCA) para 76.
[9]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA) para 38.
[10]
Minister
for Transport v Adonisi
fn 8 above para 77.
[11]
Ibid para 78.
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