Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 91South Africa
Swedish Credit Export Agency v Sacks Packaging (Pty) Ltd (D1850/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 91 (5 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
5 December 2024
Headnotes
it had jurisdiction over the respondent and the arbitration could proceed;
Judgment
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## Swedish Credit Export Agency v Sacks Packaging (Pty) Ltd (D1850/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 91 (5 December 2024)
Swedish Credit Export Agency v Sacks Packaging (Pty) Ltd (D1850/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 91 (5 December 2024)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL
DIVISION,
DURBAN
CASE NO: D1850/2024
In the matter between:
## THE SWEDISH CREDIT EXPORT
AGENCY
Applicant
THE SWEDISH CREDIT EXPORT
AGENCY
Applicant
and
SACKS PACKAGING (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
# ORDER
ORDER
## The following order is
granted:
The following order is
granted:
1.
The arbitration award made by the
International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of
Commerce (ICC) under case number
25521/HBH, comprising the partial
award on jurisdiction dated 10 February 2022, and the final award
dated 4 September 2023, are
made an order of Court.
2.
The respondent is directed, pursuant to the
arbitration award, to pay to the applicant:
2.1
the sum of € 5 972 709.51 together
with simple interest of 12% per annum on each invoice from the
respective due dates to date
of final payment, in line with the table
set out paragraph 205(a) of the arbitration award;
2.2
the sum of US$ 343 000.00, as reimbursement
for the applicant’s payment of the advance on costs for the
arbitrator’s
expenses and the ICC’s administration
expenses, together with simple interest pursuant to section 6 of the
Swedish Interest
Act [1975: 635] from the date of award until payment
in full;
2.3
the sum of € 18 973.45 as
reimbursement for the applicant’s legal and other costs,
together with simple interest pursuant
to section 6 of the Swedish
Interest Act [1975: 635] from the date of award until payment in
full;
2.4
the sum of SEK 6 492 692.25 as
reimbursement for the applicant’s legal and other costs,
together with simple interest pursuant
to section 6 of the Swedish
Interest Act [1975: 635] from the date of award until payment in
full.
3.
The respondent shall bear the costs of this
application, as taxed or agreed, at Scale C.
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## TuckerAJ
Tucker
AJ
[1]
The applicant seeks an order in terms of
section 16 of the International Arbitration Act 15 of 2017 (“the
Act”) to make
the two arbitration awards handed down by the
International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of
Commerce (hereinafter
referred to as “ICC”) of 10
February 2022 and 4 September 2023 orders of this Court.
[2]
This relief is opposed by the respondent
who, fundamentally, challenges firstly that the ICC had jurisdiction
to determine the dispute
before it, and secondly that, given the
factual
dispute
that
exists
on
the
present
papers
as
to
whether
an
arbitration agreement was ever concluded
between the parties, the relief should in any event be refused.
[3]
The history underlying the matter is
extensive, but also necessary to the determination of the current
dispute.
## Background
Background
[4]
During the period from October 2016 to
April 2019, the respondent made 30 orders of sack kraft paper
manufactured in Russia from
a Swedish based entity, Forpac
International AB (hereinafter referred to as “Forpac”).
Of these various orders, the claim arose
after it was alleged that the respondent had failed to pay for 22 of
these orders, totalling
an amount of € 5 972 709.51.
[5]
Forpac had, so it was alleged by the
applicant in the underlying arbitration proceedings, ceded its rights
to Swedbank, who in turn
subsequently ceded its rights under the
invoices to the applicant - a government agency that specializes in
providing guarantees
for Swedish companies exporting goods,
particularly in circumstances where the underlying goods are financed
by Swedish banks.
[6]
Crucially, on the sales documentation
exchanged between Forpac and the respondent, the following condition
repeatedly appeared:
‘
This
order is subject to the General Trade Rules for Paper and Paper
Board.’
[7]
This reference to General Trade Rules for
Paper and Paper Board is a clear reference to the internationally
recognised rules governing
the international trade of paper and paper
board of 1980.
[8]
Article 16 of the General Trade Rules for
Paper and Paper Board provides as follows:
‘
All
disputes arising in connection with the present contract shall be
finally settled under the Rules of Conciliation and Arbitration
of
the International Chamber of Commerce by one or more arbitrators
appointed in accordance with the Rules.’
[9]
The applicant, claiming to be the ultimate
cessionary of the rights of Forpac, declared a dispute arising from
the non-payment of
the 22 orders aforementioned, which dispute was
ultimately heard by the ICC.
[10]
The seat of the arbitration was Paris,
France, and the arbitrators were Ms Van Hooft, Mr Nilsson and Mr
Badenhorst SC. Badenhorst
SC was appointed after the respondent’s
failure to nominate an arbitrator, as it was called upon to do and
entitled.
[11]
The underlying proceedings in the ICC were
heard on two different occasions and two separate awards were handed
down.
This was
necessitated by the defence raised by the respondent.
[12]
The primary point of defence, and that
which formed part of the initial proceedings heard on 25 October 2021
at the ICC was to dispute
the jurisdiction of the ICC to determine
the dispute.
This
was, in summary, on the following grounds:
(a)
A denial of a contract ever being concluded
between the respondent and Forpac that incorporated the general trade
rules, and consequently
the denial of an agreement that renders the
dispute subject to arbitration;
(b)
The argument that, even if the ICC came to
the conclusion that an agreement was concluded between itself and
Forpac, the right to
arbitration being a right so personal it is not
capable of cession without consent and such consent was not given;
(c)
Considering the denial of the existence of
an arbitration agreement at all, which would be a pre-requisite for
the appointment of
the ICC, the ICC did not have the power to
determine the dispute as to whether it had jurisdiction to determine
its own jurisdiction
to hear the dispute.
[13]
The second hearing was before the ICC on 10
May 2023.
The
ambit of the second hearing was to deal with the balance of the
claim, the ICC having determined that it had jurisdiction in
terms of
the original award.
[14]
The respondent participating in both
hearings, though such participation in the second hearing was subject
to express reservation
that its participation should not be construed
as an acceptance of the ICC’s jurisdiction.
[15]
Ultimately:
(a)
In the first award of 10 February 2022, the
ICC held that it had jurisdiction over the respondent and the
arbitration could proceed;
(b)
The final award of 4 September 2023, the
ICC granted an award in favour of the applicant against the
respondent for payment of €
5 972 709.51, together with
ancillary relief related to costs.
[16]
The applicant now approaches this Court, in
accordance with section 16 of the International Arbitration Act 15 of
2017, to make
these two awards orders of Court. This is opposed by
the applicant.
[17]
As a brief overview of the applicant and
the respondent’s positions:
(a)
The applicant’s case rests on the
International Arbitration Act 15 of 2017, with a particular emphasis
on the importance of
the ability to enforce these awards.
The submission by the applicant,
fundamentally, is that an award was clearly made, in circumstances
where the respondent has participated.
If the respondent took issue
with any aspect of the award relating to jurisdiction it was enjoined
to approach a Court in France
to have the arbitration proceedings set
aside.
They
failed to do so and this Court accordingly must, unless there is some
technical deficiency in the award itself or it is
contra
bonos mores
(an argument not raised by
the respondent), proceed to make the award an order of Court.
(b)
The
respondent contends that, in order for the provisions of the
International Arbitration Act to apply, this Court needs to be
satisfied that an arbitration agreement exists.
It
was argued by Stokes SC for the respondent that this Court could not
come to the conclusion that there was a valid arbitration
agreement
based on the evidence in the founding affidavit. Absent this finding,
so it was argued, the Court cannot conclude that
the ICC had
jurisdiction to determine the matter and the application should be
refused. At the very least, so it was argued, the
existence of an
arbitration agreement was part of a dispute of fact on the papers
which should be resolved in favour of the respondent,
[1]
equally
leading to the dismissal of the application.
[18]
This dispute requires an analysis of the
provisions of the International Arbitration Act.
## Legislative background
Legislative background
[19]
The International Arbitration Act 15 of
2017, which forms the basis of the applicant’s claim, was
created in order to incorporate
into our Law the United Nations
Commission on International Trade Law’s Model Law on
International Commercial Arbitration
adopted by the United Nations
Commission on International Trade Law on 21 June 1985.
[20]
The relevant sections of the Act are as
follows.
[21]
The purpose of the Act is made clear in
section 3 of the Act when it states:
‘
The
objects of the Act are to—
(a)
facilitate the use of arbitration as a
method of resolving international commercial disputes;
(b)
adopt the Model Law for use in
international commercial disputes;
(c)
facilitate the recognition and enforcement
of certain arbitration agreements and arbitral awards; and
(d)
give effect to the obligations of the
Republic under the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of
Foreign Arbitral Awards
(1958), the text of which is set out in
Schedule 3 to this Act, subject to the provisions of the
Constitution.’
[22]
Three sections of the Act bear particular
consideration for the determination of whether an international
arbitration award should
be made an order of Court. These are as
follows.
[23]
Section 16(1) of the Act provides that:
‘
Subject
to section 18 an arbitration agreement and a foreign arbitral award
must be recognised and enforced in the Republic as required
by the
Convention, subject to this Chapter.’
[24]
Section 17 of the Act states:
‘
A
party seeking the recognition or enforcement of a foreign arbitral
award must produce:
(a)
(i) the original award and the original
arbitration agreement in terms of which an award was made,
authenticated in a manner in
which foreign documents must be
authenticated to enable them to be produced in any court; or
(ii) a certified copy of
that award and of that agreement; and
(b)
a sworn translation of the arbitration
agreement or arbitral award authenticated in a manner in which
foreign documents must be
authenticated for production in court, if
the agreement or award is in a language other than one of the
official languages of the
Republic: Provided that the court may
accept other documentary evidence regarding the existence of the
foreign arbitral award and
arbitration agreement as sufficient proof
where the court considers it appropriate to do so.’
[25]
Section 18 of the Act provides a limited
series of defences available to a respondent in proceedings launched
under the Act, section
18(1)(a) detailing absolute defences upon
which an applicant bears the onus to disprove, and section 18(1)(b),
detailing permissible
defences to making the award an order of Court
but where a respondent has a reverse onus to establish the defence.
[26]
There is no ambiguity in these sections of
the Act. In summary:
a.
Section 16 gives the entitlement to a
successful party in an arbitration award to have that award made an
order of Court within
the Republic of South Africa so that it may be
enforced;
b.
Section 17 details the requirements an
applicant in such proceedings must demonstrate;
c.
Section 18 provides the possible defences
available to a respondent in such proceedings.
[27]
Crucially, this Court does not sit as a
Court of review or appeal of an arbitration award. This Court is
restricted to determining
whether the applicant has complied with
section 17 and whether the respondent has raised (and evidenced if
the defence is envisaged
in section 18(1)(b) of the Act) a
permissible defence to the award being made an order of Court.
## Applying the Law to the
Facts
Applying the Law to the
Facts
[28]
Section 17 requires the original award and
the original arbitration agreement to be provided in a properly
authenticated manner.
The
Court file has such authenticated award.
[29]
The proceedings were conducted in English
and the award is in English, consequently the requirements of section
17(1)(b) have been
met.
[30]
The dispute between the parties can be
distilled down to the existence of the arbitration agreement.
[31]
The applicant has provided the purchase
orders and responses thereto in demonstrating the arbitration
agreement. This was evidenced
in the arbitration proceedings in
greater detail, but confirmed (and the purchase orders provided
evidencing the clause relied
upon) in the current application.
[32]
The respondent’s argument is that no
agreement was concluded as the clause incorporating the General Trade
Rules for Paper
and Paper Board was not agreed to, and a dispute was
raised to the cessions to the applicant and whether the right to
arbitration
was a right so personal that it could not be conceded
without consent.
[33]
In response to this argument, the applicant
relied on the principle of quasi- mutual assent.
[34]
In
summation of quasi-mutual assent and its ambit, the full Court of the
Western Cape High Court stated in
Trust
Hungary RZT v Vincorp (Pty) Ltd
[2]
as
follows:
‘
It
has long been accepted in our law that a person cannot escape from an
apparent agreement merely because his subjective intention
differed
from the apparent agreement. This is known as the doctrine of
quasi-mutual assent. In
Sonap Petroleum
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v Pappadogianis
1992 (3) SA 324
(A) at 239F-240B
the
court said that in various earlier decisions our courts had adapted,
for purposes of the facts of their respective cases, the
well-known
dictum of Blackburn J in
Smith v Hughes
(1871) LR 6 QB 597
at 607
:
‘
If,
whatever a man’s real intention may be, he so conducts himself
that a reasonable man would believe that he was assenting
to the
terms proposed by the other party, and that other party upon the
belief enters into the contract with him, the man thus
conducting
himself would be equally bound as if he had intended to agree to the
other party’s terms.’
[35]
However, it must be reiterated that this
Court does not sit as a Court of appeal in review of the underlying
arbitration.
Accordingly,
it is not for this Court to revisit the findings that have been made
by the ICC. The ICC has already dealt with this
dispute in full, and
to regale and revisit these findings would be an academic exercise
beyond the scope of the Act.
[36]
In compliance with its obligations under
section 17 of the Act, the applicant in its particulars of claim has
put up the 22 purchase
orders and invoices which contained the clause
as aforementioned incorporating the general trade rules for sales of
paper and paper
board. It is these same documents that were the basis
upon which the ICC found that jurisdiction existed, being the
purchase orders
and invoices constituting the binding agreement
between the applicant and the respondent, and that the ICC
accordingly found that
it had jurisdiction to determine the dispute.
[37]
Accordingly, and there is no contention
from the respondent otherwise, the applicant
has
complied
with
the
requirements
upon
it
under
section
17
of
the
Act. Consequently, this Court must make the arbitration award an
order of Court unless a defence under section 18 exists.
[38]
The argument raised by the respondent is
that, prior to the applicant being able to rely on any of the
provisions of the Act, the
Court must be satisfied that an
arbitration agreement exists between the parties, and failing this
the Act and its provisions are
of no moment to the dispute. This
argument, however, cannot be sustained.
This is for several reasons.
[39]
Firstly, section 17 of the Act provides
that “
the original arbitration
agreement in terms of which an award was made
”
be provided.
It
does not provide an evidential burden on an applicant to once again
prove the existence of this contract.
The
rationale behind this is clear – it would be superfluous to
submit to an international arbitration in a foreign country
if, at
the time of seeking enforcement of an award within the Republic, a
dispute of fact could so easily be created about the
existence of the
agreement or otherwise necessitating the referral of the matter to
trial (and thereby resulting in the arbitration
being effectively
pointless).
[40]
This furthermore is contrary to the context
of the Act, particularly in light of the limited discretions given to
a Court as clearly
confirmed by section 16 which specifically states
that a foreign arbitral award “
must
…
be
made an order of Court
” (own
emphasis).
[41]
Secondly, this proposition does not fit
with the provisions of Article 16 to Schedule 1 to the Act.
[42]
In particular, the following articles from
Schedule 1 bear reference: Article 16(1):
‘
The
arbitral tribunal may rule on its own jurisdiction, including any
objections with respect to the existence or validity of the
arbitration agreement. For that purpose, an arbitration clause which
forms part of a contract shall be treated as an agreement
independent
of the other terms of the contract. A decision by the arbitral
tribunal that the contract is null and void shall not
entail ipso
jure the invalidity of the arbitration clause.’
Article 16(3):
‘
The
arbitral tribunal may rule on a plea referred to in paragraph (2) of
this article either as a preliminary question or in an
award on the
merits. If the arbitral tribunal rules on such plea as a preliminary
question, any party may request, within thirty
days after having
received notice of that ruling, the court specified in article 6 to
decide the matter, which decision shall be
subject to no appeal;
while such a request is pending, the arbitral tribunal may continue
the arbitral proceedings and make an
award.’
[43]
Article 16(1) is a formal inclusion of the
so-called competence-competence principle from international law.
[44]
Article 16(3) provides protection against
individuals and entities within the Republic who dispute a decision
that the arbitral
body had jurisdiction over them (which would
include a wide jurisdictional challenge that the arbitration
agreement was not concluded
between the parties). It does so by
giving the right to a person or entity who has received an award on
jurisdiction under the
competence-competence principle to approach
Court within 30 days of receiving the ruling and seek suitable
relief. The Court in
this instance would be a High Court of Paris,
considering the seat of the arbitration.
[45]
There is no evidence to suggest that the
respondent availed itself of its right to challenge the finding of
the initial arbitration
award that the ICC had jurisdiction to
determine whether there was an agreement of arbitration between the
applicant and the respondent
(including the incorporation of the
general trade rules and the challenge to competence-competence
ruling).
[46]
Thirdly, in challenging the application to
make an international arbitration award an order of Court, a
respondent in such application
appears to be limited to the grounds
set forth in section 18 of the Act.
Section
18(1)(b) of the Act, which involves various challenges to the
existence, ambit or applicability of an agreement, all require
that
it is “the party against whom the award is invoked” must
prove to the satisfaction of the Court such invalidity.
[47]
The defence raised by the respondent does
not fall within the ambit of section 18(1)(a) of the Act. It arguably
does not fall within
the ambit of section 18(1)(b) of the Act either,
but even the defence did fall within such ambit this is a clear
situation of a
reverse onus where is it incumbent on the respondent
to demonstrate, through evidence, that there are deficiencies with
the agreement
that render the award unenforceable.
[48]
The respondent has done little in the
answering affidavit to discharge this onus. The deponent to the
answering affidavit, Mr Kisten,
and in summary, alleges that there
was no agreement because the overarching agreement in terms of which
the relationship between
the respondent and Forpac came into
existence did not incorporate the order being subject to the general
trades for paper and paper
board. The respondent refers the disputes
raised about the timing of invoices, certain orders not containing
signatures by respondent’s
representatives, etc.
[49]
All of these challenges, however,
constitute argument rather than fact.
Apart
from a bare denial, there is nothing to suggest or argue why this was
not agreed to by the furnishing of further orders, by
the acceptance
of goods under such order, or why quasi-mutual assent would not be
applicable.
Nor
is there any explanation as to why the several years of purchase
orders and invoices containing the same proviso could be ignored.
[50]
In those circumstances and even were the
matter to fall within the ambit of a permissible dispute under
section 18(1)(b) of the
Act, it is an onus that has not been
discharged by the respondent.
[51]
That
said, the challenge made does not appear to actually fall within the
limited scope of section 18(1)(b), but instead is in effect
an appeal
of the decision by the ICC when it found that “
as
a matter of fact, respondent must have seen the references to the
general trade rules on the sales orders when signing them
”.
[3]
The
respondent has also avoided the findings relating to the process
where the references to orders being subject to the general
trade
rules for the sales of paper and paper board form part of the
purchase orders, which would thereafter be stamped and accepted
by
the respondent (sometimes on top of the reference to the general
trade rules), an order thereafter shipped, and an invoice generated
by Forpac.
[52]
To
argue
that
this
Court
must
confirm
the
existence
of
the
arbitration
agreement,
rather than attacking on the limited grounds of section 18(1), would
be impermissibly to elevate this Court to a Court
of appeal against
the findings already made, and in circumstances where the respondent
has neglected to avail itself of its rights
under Article 16(3) of
the Act by approaching the High Court in Paris to challenge the
determination made as to whether the ICC
had jurisdiction.
[53]
This argument of the respondent is contrary
to the express wording of the Act, and ignores the limitations on
defences and the safeguards
built in for those continuing to dispute
jurisdiction – the same safeguards the respondent appears to
have elected not to
avail itself of.
[54]
During
the course of argument specific reference was made to the decision of
Canton
Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd t/a Cube Architects v Fanti Bekker Hattingh
N.O.
.
[4]
It
was suggested that the applicant is in effect asking the Court to do
is to make the same mistake that the Supreme Court of Appeal
found
had been made by the Court a
quo
in
the aforementioned decision.
[55]
The difficulty with this submission is that
Canton Trading
was
a domestic arbitration that was decided. The Court in that matter did
confirm the common law principle that arbitrators cannot
decide their
own jurisdiction. However, this case did not relate to an arbitration
to which the Act applied, and accordingly Article
16 of Schedule 1 to
the International Arbitration Act which confirms the incorporation of
the competence-competence principle into
our law in those limited
circumstances did not apply.
[56]
Canton Trading v Hattingh
therefore
has no relevance to the respondent’s current position as a
party to an international arbitration.
[57]
The
underlying position in common law was that international arbitration
awards would be enforced by our Courts unless exceptional
circumstances existed otherwise.
[5]
There is nothing in the Act that suggests that the common law has
been amended from this (or the Act’s predecessor, The
Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards Act, 40 of
1977) so as to remove this requirement, save to codify some of
the
exceptional circumstances under section 18 of the Act.
[58]
As a consequence of the above, the
respondent has failed to demonstrate the exceptional circumstances
required in order for this
Court to be able to ignore the duty on it
to enforce arbitration awards provided the requirements of section 17
are met, nor is
any permissible defence under section 18 is raised
and evidenced by the respondent.
[59]
The opposition to making the awards of the
ICC an order of Court must accordingly fail. The applicant met the
requirements on it
under section 17 of the Act and there being no
permissible defence under section 18 raised, must succeed in its
application.
[60]
Turning to considerations of costs, there
is no reason why the ordinary rule that costs should follow the
result should not apply.
Considering the subject matter and quantum
involved, scale C would be appropriate.
[61]
Consequently, the applicant is entitled to
relief sought and an order is granted in the following terms:
1.
The arbitration award made by the
International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of
Commerce (ICC) under case number
25521/HBH, comprising the partial
award on jurisdiction dated 10 February 2022, and the final award
dated 4 September 2023, are
made an order of Court.
2.
The respondent is directed, pursuant to the
arbitration award, to pay to the applicant:
2.1
the sum of € 5 972 709.51 together
with simple interest of 12% per annum on each invoice from the
respective due dates to date
of final payment, in line with the table
set out paragraph 205(a) of the arbitration award;
2.2
the sum of US$ 343 000.00, as reimbursement
for the applicant’s payment of the advance on costs for the
arbitrator’s
expenses and the ICC’s administration
expenses, together with simple interest pursuant to section 6 of the
Swedish Interest
Act [1975: 635] from the date of award until payment
in full;
2.3
the sum of € 18 973.45 as
reimbursement for the applicant’s legal and other costs,
together with simple interest pursuant
to section 6 of the Swedish
Interest Act [1975: 635] from the date of award until payment in
full;
2.4
the sum of SEK 6 492 692.25 as
reimbursement for the applicant’s legal and other costs,
together with simple interest pursuant
to section 6 of the Swedish
Interest Act [1975: 635] from the date of award until payment in
full.
3.
The respondent shall bear the costs of this
application, as taxed or agreed, at Scale C.
# TUCKER AJ
TUCKER AJ
#
Appearances
Counsel
for the Applicant:
CJ
Bekker
Instructed
by:
Bowman
Gilfillan Inc
11
Live Lane, Sandton
Jonthan.barnes@bowmandslaw.com
Ref:
J Barnes/6230561
C/o
Bowman Gilfillan Inc
4th
Floor, Ncondo Chambers
45
Vuna Close, Umhlanga Ridge
Counsel
for the Respondent:
A
Stokes SC
Instructed
by:
Garlicke
& Bousfield Inc
7
Torsvale Crescent
La
Lucia Ridge Office Estate
patrick.forbes@gb.co.za
Ref:
P Forbes/G Vadivalu/
Date
of Hearing:
19
November 2024
Date
Judgment Delivered:
5
December 2024
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints
(TVL)
Ltd.
v
Van
Riebeck
Paints
(Pty)
Ltd
1984
(3)
SA
623
(AD)
being
referenced.
[2]
Trust
Hungary RZT v Vincorp (Pty) Ltd
[2016]
ZAWCHC 112
, ad para 36, as discussed further on appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Vincorp
(Pty) Ltd v Trust Hungary
ZRT
[2018] ZASCA 35
[3]
Paragraph
173 of the partial award on jurisdiction – ICC Case Number
25521/HBH.
[4]
Canton
Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd t/a Cube Architects v Fanti Bekker Hattingh
N.O.
2022
(4) SA 420 (SCA).
[5]
Kapci
Coatings S.A.E v Kapci Coatings SA CC and Another
[2024]
ZAGPJHC 450, ad para 30
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