Case Law[2025] ZASCA 44South Africa
Mason N O v Mason and Another (1286/2023) [2025] ZASCA 44 (14 April 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984 – misappropriation of funds by member of close corporation (CC) – whether debt owed to CC prescribed – s 12(3) of Prescription Act 69 of 1968 – constructive knowledge of misappropriation by co- member – corporate attribution to CC – appellant failing to satisfy onus of proving constructive knowledge – unnecessary to consider issue of corporate attribution – debt not prescribed.
Judgment
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## Mason N O v Mason and Another (1286/2023) [2025] ZASCA 44 (14 April 2025)
Mason N O v Mason and Another (1286/2023) [2025] ZASCA 44 (14 April 2025)
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sino date 14 April 2025
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Prescription –
Knowledge
of facts
–
Claim
based on misappropriation of funds from close corporation –
Contended that member had constructive knowledge of
misappropriation – Arising from role and duties as member –
Member would have needed more than financial statements
–
Member was excluded from any financial role in business –
Could not convincingly be contended that he failed
to take
reasonable steps to discover the misappropriations –
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
,
s 12(3).
# THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Not Reportable
Not Reportable
Case no: 1286/2023
In
the matter between:
# PATRICIABRIDGETMASONNOAPPELLANT
PATRICIA
BRIDGET
MASON
N
O
APPELLANT
and
# GRAHAMANDREWMASON
FIRST RESPONDENT
GRAHAM
ANDREW
MASON
FIRST RESPONDENT
#
L
MASON ELECTRICAL CC
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Mason
N O v Mason and Another
(1286/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 44
(14 April 2025)
Coram:
ZONDI DP and WEINER, KEIGHTLEY and KOEN JJA and
BLOEM AJA
Heard:
4 March 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the
parties’
representatives
by
email,
publication
on
the
Supreme
Court
of
Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The
time and date for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 14 April 2025.
Summary:
Close Corporation Act 69 of 1984 –
misappropriation of funds by member of close corporation (CC) –
whether debt owed
to CC prescribed – s 12(3) of Prescription
Act 69 of 1968 – constructive knowledge of misappropriation by
co- member
– corporate attribution to CC – appellant
failing to satisfy onus of proving constructive knowledge –
unnecessary
to consider issue of corporate attribution – debt
not prescribed.
# ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Gqeberha (Potgieter J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
2.
The cross-appeal is dismissed.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
##
## Keightley JA (Zondi DP
and Weiner, Koen JJA and Bloem AJA)
Keightley JA (Zondi DP
and Weiner, Koen JJA and Bloem AJA)
Introduction
[1]
This appeal involves a dispute between the
deceased estate (the estate) of Ashley Mason (the deceased), and his
surviving brother,
Graham Andrew Mason (Mr Mason), who is the first
respondent. The appellant, Bridget Patricia Mason, is the wife of the
deceased
and the executrix (the executrix and Mrs Mason) of the
estate. The second respondent is L Mason Electrical CC, a close
corporation
(the CC) the sole members of whom, during the deceased’s
lifetime, were the deceased and Mr Mason.
[2]
The deceased held a 60% interest in the CC
and Mr Mason the remaining 40%. The brothers had different
responsibilities in the business
of the CC. The deceased
oversaw
the
management
and
finances.
He
was
assisted
in
its
administration by his wife and his daughter. Mr Mason, on the other
hand, had no involvement in the management and financial
aspects of
the business, instead playing a hands-on role in its operational and
technical side.
[3]
On 5 May 1999, the Mason brothers entered
into an agreement, the purpose of which was to provide that, on the
death of one member,
the surviving member would purchase, from the
deceased member’s estate, his interest in the CC. To facilitate
this, each
member agreed to take out a life insurance policy (the
policy), in his name, on the life of the other member. The agreement
provided
that the price payable by the survivor for the deceased
member’s interest in the CC would be the proceeds of the
policy,
less estate duty. Central to the dispute was clause 6.2. It
provided:
‘
If
the Deceased shall have been indebted to the [CC] at the date of his
death on any cause of debt whatsoever, the Survivor shall
be entitled
to withhold from any payment due to the Executor in terms hereof and
to pay to the [CC] an amount equal to the said
Indebtedness, and any
such payment shall be deemed to be a payment to the Executor on
account of the purchase price.’
[4]
The deceased died on 25 April 2016. As at
that date the value of the policy on his life was R4 779 372. This
amount was paid to
Mr Mason by the insurer. The executrix sought to
enforce the terms of the agreement by tendering the deceased’s
interest
in the CC to Mr Mason against payment to the estate of this
amount. When Mr Mason resisted the demand for payment, she issued
summons
against him under case number 2353/2016 (the executrix’s
claim) in the Eastern Cape Division of the High Court, Gqeberha (the
high court).
[5]
In his plea, Mr Mason placed reliance on
clause 6.2 of the agreement. He pleaded
that
during
his
lifetime,
and
while
managing
and
controlling
the
CC,
the
deceased had misappropriated funds from the CC for his and his
family’s benefit. Mr Mason pleaded further that while the
exact
amount misappropriated by the deceased was not presently
quantifiable, it exceeded the value of the proceeds of the policy.
He
averred that the deceased was indebted to the CC in an amount
exceeding R4 779 372 and, therefore, that under clause 6.2 he
(Mr
Mason) had no obligation under the agreement to effect payment to the
estate of the amount claimed.
[6]
The executrix applied for summary judgment,
which was opposed by Mr Mason. He filed an opposing affidavit (the
summary judgment
affidavit) in which he set out his defence to the
action. Of relevance to the appeal, he made the following averments:
‘
9.1
Over a period of 15 years, the deceased, my
late brother, acquired significant assets.
9.2
I did not understand the means by which
these assets were acquired. Besides the fact that I am a lay person,
being in business with
my brother, I trusted him.
9.3
Upon the passing away of my brother, I was
in a position for the first time to obtain certain records of the
[CC] that hitherto
had not been made available to me.
9.4
It immediately became apparent that the
deceased had made large scale withdrawals from the [CC], either in
his personal capacity,
or diverted monies to his family.
10.1
My preliminary investigation revealed not
hundreds of thousands, but millions of rands were diverted from the
[CC] to fund the acquisition
of properties, a wine and olive farm in
the Calitzdorp area, which included the building of a winery (a
massive expense).
10.2
Subsequent thereto I have engaged the
services of forensic auditors, Derek Pearton Financial Services, who
are currently busy finalizing
their forensic report. The preliminary
investigations reveal that the misappropriation/unlawful withdrawings
are well in excess
of R5 million.’
[7]
The matter did not proceed by way of
summary judgment. In the interim, the CC was joined as a party to the
action. Mr Mason and
the CC instituted a separate action in the high
court, under case number 3039/2016, against the estate (the CC’s
claim).
This action was based on the alleged misappropriation
committed by the deceased. The relief sought was for a statement and
debatement
of account. In the particulars of claim, it was averred
that the alleged misappropriation of funds had occurred in the period
between
2001 to 25 April 2016.
[8]
The
executrix
raised
a
special
plea
of
prescription
to
the
CC’s
claim.
She pleaded that:
‘
2.
Throughout [the period between 2001 to 25 April
2016] [Mr Mason] held a 40% member’s interest in the CC and he
accordingly
owed to the CC a fiduciary duty as required by law.
3.
In the event only that it is found that
[the deceased] conducted himself unlawfully in the manner alleged by
the plaintiffs, which
is in any event denied:
3.1
Then [Mr Mason] knew, or ought reasonably
to have known by virtue of the fiduciary duty he owed to the CC, of
such unlawful conduct.
3.2
[Mr Mason’s] knowledge is in the
circumstances imputed to the corporation.
3.3
The plaintiff’s summons was served on
the defendant on 5 September 2016.
3.4
The plaintiffs’ claims against the
defendant have accordingly become prescribed by operation of
section
11
of the
Prescription Act, 68 of 1969
, save in respect of any
unlawful conduct which may be proved during the three year period
immediately preceding the service of
summons on the defendant, which
unlawful conduct is in any event denied’
[9]
The two actions were consolidated for trial
in the high court. By the time the matter was ripe for hearing, the
issues between the
parties had narrowed. Significantly, it was no
longer seriously disputed by the executrix that the deceased had
misappropriated
funds from the CC between 2001 and 25 April 2016. Nor
was it disputed that at least some of the amounts were repayable by
the estate.
The primary issue in dispute was that of prescription.
[10]
The executrix accepted that all amounts
unlawfully misappropriated by the deceased in the three years
preceding his death were owed
to the CC. It was agreed that this
amounted to approximately R644 142.58. However, she contended that
the debt, being the balance
of the amounts misappropriated, had
become prescribed vis- à-vis the CC. This was because Mr
Mason’s knowledge of
the deceased’s misappropriation, as
pleaded in paragraph 3.1 of her plea, was attributable to, and hence
became the knowledge
of, the CC. Consequently, she sought an order
that Mr Mason be directed to pay to the estate the proceeds of the
policy, less the
amount of R644 142.58 being the amount of the
deceased’s indebtedness to the CC that had not prescribed.
[11]
The trial proceeded with the evidence of
only one witness, Mr Pearton, who was Mr Mason and the CC’s
forensic auditor. He
had compiled an expert report (the Pearton
report) on the investigation that he had conducted into the financial
affairs of the
CC and the related misappropriation of funds by the
deceased. Mr Mason did not give evidence, nor did the executrix or
her expert,
who had prepared a report and held expert discussions
with Mr Pearton. At the end of the trial, the high court dismissed
the executrix’s
claim. The court directed the executrix to pay
to the CC the amount of R7 406 139. 97 (being the total amount of the
misappropriation
by the deceased established on the evidence) to the
CC. From this amount was to be deducted the amount paid to Mr Mason
under the
policy. Mr Mason was ordered separately to pay the amount
of the policy to the CC. The executrix was ordered to pay the costs
of
the consolidated action in her representative capacity.
[12]
The high court granted the executrix leave
to appeal against its judgment and order and directed that the appeal
be heard by this
Court. The CC was granted leave to cross-appeal
against the costs order.
[13]
The issues on appeal are limited. The first
is whether the high court erred in rejecting the executrix’s
plea of prescription
(the prescription issue). Stated differently,
the question is whether, contrary to what the high court found, the
executrix succeeded
in establishing that Mr Mason had actual or
constructive knowledge of the misappropriation by the deceased during
the latter’s
lifetime. It is only if this question is answered
in favour of the executrix that the second issue will require
consideration.
That is the question of whether Mr Mason’s
knowledge of the misappropriation can be attributed to the CC (the
corporate attribution
issue). Finally, the cross-appeal against the
costs order must be considered.
[14]
The
legal principles that apply to the prescription issue are trite.
Under s 12(1) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 (the Act),
prescription commences to run as soon as a debt is due. This is
subject to two riders in s 12(3). First, the section creates the
exception that a debt will not be deemed to be due until the creditor
has knowledge of the identity of the debtor and the facts
from which
the debt arises. The second is the proviso to this exception, namely
that ‘a creditor shall be deemed to have
such knowledge if he
could have acquired it by exercising reasonable care’. The onus
lies on the party raising the special
plea of prescription to prove
the defence, including the facts on which the exception in s 12(3) is
based.
[1]
[15]
It
is settled that prescription will commence when the creditor has the
minimum facts necessary to institute action.
[2]
Prescription will not be delayed because she or he does not yet have
the evidence to prove the case comfortably.
[3]
As far as the knowledge contemplated in s 12(3) is concerned, this
may be either actual knowledge, or constructive knowledge under
that
section’s deeming proviso.
[4]
A creditor whose passivity, or supine inaction, accounts for their
lack of actual knowledge may nonetheless be held to have had
the
requisite constructive knowledge under the proviso if, by acting
diligently, they reasonably could have acquired the facts
necessary
to institute action.
[5]
[16]
The executrix initially pleaded actual
knowledge, alternatively, deemed or constructive knowledge on the
part of Mr Mason. However,
by the time the appeal was heard, she
placed reliance only on Mr Mason’s alleged constructive
knowledge of the misappropriation
effected by the deceased. Her case
was that the facts demonstrated that Mr Mason’s position in the
CC was such that with
the exercise of reasonable care he could have
acquired knowledge of the misappropriation committed by the deceased
sufficient to
support the CC’s claim.
[17]
The
case on appeal rested on two legs. The first was the contention that
as a member with a 40% interest, Mr Mason owed a fiduciary
duty to
the CC under the
Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984
. He was obliged to
exercise such powers as he had to manage or represent the CC in the
interest, and for the benefit of, the close
corporation.
[6]
He had an entitlement to participate in the carrying on of the
business of the CC,
[7]
and to
call a meeting of members for any purpose.
[8]
[18]
According to the executrix, as a matter of
law, Mr Mason had a legal duty to use these powers for the protection
of the CC. He could
have convened a member’s meeting with a
view to extracting from the deceased full disclosure of the CC’s
affairs. He
could have asked for access to the financial statements
of the CC. Had he done so, the deceased would have been bound, by his
own
fiduciary duty to the CC, to make full disclosure, putting Mr
Mason in a position to approach the court for appropriate relief to
protect the CC. In short, what the executrix argued was that through
the exercise of his legal obligations and entitlements as
a member of
the CC he could reasonably have acquired knowledge of the deceased’s
misappropriation of funds.
[19]
I am not persuaded that the fact that Mr
Mason stood in a fiduciary relationship to the CC, and that he had
certain statutory obligations
and entitlements available to him, is
sufficient to satisfy the burden resting on the executrix. In the
absence of facts to support
this thesis, the argument is speculative.
Taken to its logical limits, it would mean that every member of a CC,
by virtue of his
or her legal relationship with the corporation, as a
matter of course, would have constructive knowledge of wrongdoings in
its
management for purposes of prescription. As this case
demonstrates,
such
an
outcome
could
operate
to
the
detriment
of
the
CC.
Plainly,
in every case, facts must be pleaded and proved to show that it would
have been reasonably expected of a member, like Mr
Mason in this
case,
[9]
to exercise his powers.
In addition, there must be evidence that had he or she done so, the
facts necessary to support the claim
against the wrongdoer would have
come to light.
[20]
The second leg of the executrix’s
case was that there was evidence to this effect. There were,
according to her, two ‘red
flags’ that, had Mr Mason
acted reasonably, would have alerted him to wrongdoings in the CC.
Instead, it was contended, he
had adopted a supine attitude by
ignoring them and, accordingly, he could not claim the benefit of the
exception in
s 12(3)
to delay the running of prescription.
[21]
The first red flag relied on by the
executrix appeared from statements made in the summary judgment
affidavit. The executrix placed
reliance particularly on Mr Mason’s
statements that he and the deceased drew only modest drawings from
the CC; that over
15 years the deceased had acquired ‘significant
assets’; that Mr Mason did not understand how he had acquired
them;
that when the deceased died it had ‘immediately become
apparent’ to Mr Mason that the deceased had made large-scale
withdrawals from the CC; and that Mr Mason’s ‘preliminary
investigation’ had revealed the diversion of substantial
sums,
amounting to millions of rands, to fund assets for the deceased. The
submission by the executrix was that, on Mr Mason’s
own version
in the summary judgment affidavit, there were warning signs that
something
was
amiss
with
the
financial
affairs
of
the
CC, and that
the
reasonable
member in his position would have used the statutory powers available
to him to find out what was afoot. Had he done
so, it was submitted,
he could have found out what was going on.
[22]
There are several difficulties with the
executrix’s reliance on the summary judgment affidavit. It is a
brief affidavit setting
out no more than an outline of Mr Mason’s
intended defence to the executrix’s claim against him.
Importantly, it was
not an answer to the executrix’s special
plea of prescription, which came later. By its nature, the summary
judgment affidavit
was intended to do no more than demonstrate that
he had a bona fide defence. It was not meant to set out chapter and
verse of the
particulars of the defence. Nor did it. In fact, the
portions of the affidavit emphasised by the executrix are no more
than one-line
statements, abstracted from any explanatory context.
They cannot be interpreted to say, as the executrix sought to
persuade this
Court, that Mr Mason was, or ought to have been,
suspicious of how his brother had acquired significant assets, or
that the misappropriation
of funds would have been obvious to him,
had he had access to the CC’s records earlier. That would be to
assume a context,
and hence nuance, that is not present in the
summary judgment affidavit.
[23]
The second red flag was that, according to
the Pearton report, and confirmed by Mr Pearton in his evidence, Mr
Mason had approached
the bookkeeper more than once to find out why
his loan account was always in the red, while the deceased’s
was in credit.
The executrix submitted that this demonstrated that Mr
Mason’s suspicions were raised, or that they ought reasonably
to have
been. In either event, it was submitted by the executrix that
he ought then to have taken steps to find out what was going on with
the CC’s financial affairs.
[24]
As I indicated earlier, the facts were that
the deceased managed the CC and was in control of its financial
affairs. Mr Pearton
testified that Mr Mason’s role was on the
technical side, in the workshop or at sites where the contract work
was performed.
His only involvement on the business-side was to
occasionally sign cheques if the deceased was not available and to
sign financial
statements. This had been confirmed by the bookkeeper,
whom Mr Pearton had interviewed. The bookkeeper made entries on the
Pastel
accounting system on the instructions of the deceased, or the
executrix and their daughter, who worked in the office. None of this
was challenged by the executrix. On the facts, it must be accepted
that the operation of the CC’s business depended on the
deceased and Mr Mason fulfilling these separate and distinct roles.
[25]
The CC was a family business that was
started by the brothers’ father. There is no evidence of any
bad blood between the brothers
during the deceased’s lifetime
that would have led Mr Mason to distrust the deceased and his
management of the CC and its
finances. The CC by all accounts
functioned well until after the deceased’s death, when the
misappropriations came to light.
According to Mr Pearton, it had a
very good turnover earned from the large contracts it secured. Mr
Pearton explained there was
enough cash coming in to ensure that the
business was not affected by the deceased’s misappropriation of
funds. Again, this
evidence went unchallenged.
[26]
Red flags are easy to spot in hindsight,
but hindsight is not the appropriate vantage
point
here.
The
question
is
whether,
on
failing
to
receive
a
satisfactory
response to queries about her or his loan account being in the red,
the reasonable person would have suspected that
the deceased might be
misappropriating funds from the CC. The question must be considered
from the position of a reasonable person
in the shoes of Mr Mason at
the relevant time. The facts do not lead to this conclusion. The
business was in a healthy financial
state.
It was not unusual that personal expenses
were paid by the CC and then debited to the relevant member’s
loan account. While
Mr Mason may have been concerned about the
accuracy of the status of his own loan account, he had no reason to
distrust his brother’s
financial management, let alone suspect
him of stealing from the CC.
[27]
Counsel for the executrix made much of what
he submitted were important concessions made by Mr Pearton under
cross-examination.
He contended that these concessions proved that
the misappropriation of funds would have been obvious to Mr Mason had
he looked
for them. In other words, the argument was that Mr
Pearton’s concessions showed that with the exercise of
reasonable care
Mr Mason would have been able to acquire the
knowledge necessary to take steps to protect the interests of the CC
at the time that
the misappropriations occurred.
[28]
The fundamental flaw with this argument is
that it is divorced from the realities of the case established on the
evidence. Mr Pearton’s
evidence and report explained in detail
how the various forms of misappropriation were captured and dealt
with in the financial
records over the entire period of 17 years. It
is plain from this evidence that to understand what was going on, Mr
Mason would
have had to have access to much more than the financial
statements of the CC which, conceivably, he could have acquired using
his
statutory rights.
[29]
He would have required to access the manual
cash books until 2009, when the CC went over to the Pastel accounting
system. It is
not only the CC’s cash books that he would have
had to access, but also those its second line of business, under the
name
of Data Cabling, in which, according to Mr Pearton, most of the
misappropriations appeared. The cash books alone would not have
been
enough, because the entries were mostly abbreviated and without
sufficient detail to indicate, without more, who the creditor
was,
and what the payment had been for. It had been necessary for Mr
Pearton to source and peruse supporting documents, emails
and
invoices to discover these details. Some entries were made with
misleading explanations. For example, amounts paid for ‘stationery’
were payments for labels for the wine that the deceased was producing
on his farm. Mr Pearton had to delve deep to find this information.
Mr Mason could not have obtained this level of information simply
through the exercise of his statutory rights.
[30]
Even if this was theoretically possible
(which in any event, in my view is insufficient to satisfy the onus
on the executrix), the
argument based on Mr Pearton’s
concessions is flawed for two further, related reasons. The first is
that the concessions
from Mr Pearton were extracted based on an
explicit assumption that was put to him: he was asked to answer the
questions on the
assumption that Mr Mason had taken ‘his duties
more seriously and involved himself in the financial affairs’
of the
CC. Any concession based on such an explicit assumption has no
probative value unless the assumption is grounded in fact.
[31]
This leads to the second flaw, which is
that the evidence dispels the assumption. The uncontested evidence
was that Mr Mason was
excluded from any financial role in the
business. He was not required to involve himself in its financial
affairs at all. In the
circumstances, it could not convincingly be
contended that he failed to take reasonable steps to discover the
misappropriations
because he did not involve himself more seriously
in the financial side of the business. That would involve measuring
him against
the standard of a reasonable person who was not in his
position.
[32]
At the end of the day, the executrix bore
the onus of establishing that with the exercise of reasonable care Mr
Mason could have
uncovered the necessary facts about the
misappropriation of funds by the deceased that would have enabled Mr
Mason timeously to
take steps to protect the CC’s position. On
the evidence, she failed to satisfy this onus. The high court did not
err in
coming to the same conclusion. It follows that the appeal in
respect of the dismissal of the special plea of prescription must
fail. In the circumstances, it is not necessary to consider the
appeal insofar as the corporate attribution issue is concerned.
[33]
The remaining issue is the cross-appeal
against the costs order. The high court made the customary order of
costs in estate matters
by directing that they be borne by the
executrix in her representative capacity. In support of the
cross-appeal Mr Mason raised
various criticisms about how the
executrix’s case had been managed. He also submitted that the
evidence indicated that Mrs
Mason, in her personal capacity, was
aware of the deceased’s wrongdoing and was complicit in it. He
submitted that the high
court had committed an appealable
misdirection by not taking these factors into account.
[34]
It is trite that an appeal court can only
interfere with an order of costs in very limited circumstances.
Criticisms levelled at
how a party managed its case
do not warrant interference. As to the
alleged personal complicity of the executrix, it is important to draw
a distinction between
Mrs Mason in her personal capacity, and Mrs
Mason in her capacity as executrix. In her latter capacity, she had
an obligation to
act in the interests of the estate and of the
ultimate beneficiaries. She did no more than this in pursuing her
claim against Mr
Mason for payment of the proceeds of the policy
under the agreement. Accordingly, there was no misdirection on the
part of the
high court in declining to direct that she be personally
liable for the costs. There is no merit in the cross-appeal. As it
comprised
so minor a component of the overall costs, the pragmatic
approach is to make no order as to the costs of the cross-appeal.
[35]
For all the above reasons, I make the
following order:
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
2.
The cross-appeal is dismissed.
R
M KEIGHTLEY
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
S C
Rorke SC
Instructed
by:
Rushmere
Noach Incorporated, Gqeberha
McIntyre
Van der Post Inc., Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
P E
Jooste with K M Morris
Instructed
by:
Friedman
Scheckter, Gqeberha Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Gericke
v Sack
1978
(1) SA 821
(A) (
Gericke
)
at 826C-827G. See also
Yarona
Healthcare Network (Pty) Ltd v Medshield Medical Scheme
[2017]
ZASCA 116
;
[2017] 4 All SA 705
(SCA);
2018 (1) SA 513
(SCA) para 61.
[2]
Minister
of Finance v Gore NO
[2006]
ZASCA 98
;
[2007] 1 All SA 309
(SCA);
2007 (1) SA 111
(SCA) at 119J-
120A
(
Gore
).
[3]
Nedcor
Bank Bpk v Regering van die Republiek van Suid-Afrika
[2000] ZASCA 154
;
2001
(1) SA 987
(SCA) paras 11 and 13 (
Nedcor
).
[4]
Le
Roux v Johannes G Coetzee en Seuns
[2023]
ZACC 46
;
2024 (4) BCLR 522
(CC);
2024 (4) SA 1
(CC) para 40.
[5]
Gericke
fn
1 at 832B-D;
Macleod
v Kweyiya
[2013]
ZASCA 28
;
2013 (6) SA 1
(SCA) (
Macloed
)
at 6C-E.
[6]
Section
42(2)(
a
)(i).
[7]
Section
46(
a
).
[8]
Section
48(1).
[9]
Macloed
fn
5 at 6C-E.
sino noindex
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