Case Law[2025] ZASCA 60South Africa
Pieters and Another v Stemmet and Another (079/2024) [2025] ZASCA 60; [2025] 3 All SA 304 (SCA); 2025 (6) SA 201 (SCA) (14 May 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
14 May 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 – Section 2(1)(a) – property within a township but designated for agricultural purposes – occupiers entitled to protections afforded under the Act.
Judgment
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## Pieters and Another v Stemmet and Another (079/2024) [2025] ZASCA 60; [2025] 3 All SA 304 (SCA); 2025 (6) SA 201 (SCA) (14 May 2025)
Pieters and Another v Stemmet and Another (079/2024) [2025] ZASCA 60; [2025] 3 All SA 304 (SCA); 2025 (6) SA 201 (SCA) (14 May 2025)
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sino date 14 May 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
LAND
TENURE – Eviction –
ESTA
requirements –
Magistrate
dismissing ESTA application and granting eviction order in terms
of PIE – Property within township –
Designated for
agricultural purposes – This ordinarily implied by land
zoned as “rural” – Land Claims
Court erred in
treating “rural” zoning as materially distinct from
agricultural designation for purposes of ESTA
– Designation
brings it within ambit of ESTA, notwithstanding location within
township – Appellants qualify as
“occupiers"
protected under ESTA – Extension of Security of Tenure Act
62 of 1997, s 2(1)(a).
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 079/2024
In
the matter between:
JACOB
PIETERS
FIRST APPELLANT
CATHERINA
PIETERS
SECOND APPELLANT
and
STEPHAN
CORNE STEMMET
FIRST RESPONDENT
PETER
GABRIEL STEMMET
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Pieters and Another v Stemmet and
Another
(079/24)
[2025] ZASCA 60
(14 May 2025)
Coram:
MEYER, MATOJANE, UNTERHALTER
and KEIGHTLEY JJA and WINDELL AJA
Heard:
13 March
2025
Delivered:
14 May
2025
Summary:
Extension
of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997
–
Section 2(1)
(a)
–
property within a township but designated for agricultural purposes –
occupiers entitled to protections afforded
under the Act.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Land Claims Court, held at Randburg (Spilg J and
Meer AJP sitting as court of appeal)
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Land Claims Court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
a.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
b.
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following:
i.
The property registered in the Deeds Registry as Portion 81 of the
Farm Joostenberg
Vlakte 728 is subject to the Extension of Security
of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA).
ii.
The appellants as long-term ESTA occupiers are entitled to the
protections under ESTA.
iii.
No order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Windell
AJA (Meyer, Matojane, Unterhalter and Keightley JJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The Extension of Security
of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) was enacted by Parliament to give
effect to key constitutional rights,
including the right to security
of tenure, the right not to be arbitrarily evicted, and the right of
access to adequate housing.
It seeks to protect vulnerable occupiers
living on land falling within the ambit of ESTA from unjustified
evictions and the risk
of homelessness. In line with its purpose,
ESTA must be interpreted in a manner that promotes these
constitutional values and ensures
that those who fall within its
scope are afforded the fullest possible protection. Any termination
of such occupiers’ right
of occupation must therefore comply
strictly with the provisions of ESTA.
[1]
[2]
This appeal centres on
the interpretation of s 2 of ESTA, which provides, as a general rule,
that land situated within or entirely
surrounded by a township is
excluded from the application of ESTA
.
[2]
However, ss
2(1)
(a)
and
(b)
of
ESTA qualify this general exclusion and provide specific criteria for
determining whether ESTA applies:
‘
(1)
Subject
to the provisions of section 4, this Act shall apply to all land
other than land in a
township
established, approved, proclaimed or otherwise recognised as such in
terms of any law, or encircled by such a township
or townships, but
including-
(a)
any
land within such a township which has been designated for
agricultural purposes in terms of any law; and
(b)
any
land within such a township which has been established, approved,
proclaimed or otherwise recognised after
4 February 1997, in respect
only of a person who was an occupier immediately prior to such
establishment, approval, proclamation
or recognition.’
[3]
In terms of ESTA an
occupier residing on land falling within the ambit of s 2 is afforded
substantive protection. The protection
goes beyond what the common
law provides.
[3]
The key issue
before the Land Claims Court, Spilg J and Meer AJP (LCC), and now
this Court, is whether the property occupied by
the appellants is
situated within a township
or
on land not ‘designated for agricultural purposes in terms of
any law’
.
If so, the matter would fall under the scope of the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19
of 1998
(PIE), not ESTA.
[4]
The appellants, Mr and Mrs Pieterse, reside on the property
of the
first respondent, Mr Stephan Stemmet (Mr Stemmet). The property is
one of several smallholdings in the Joostenberg Vlakte
Smallholdings,
a rural community just outside Cape Town in the Western Cape. Mr
Stemmet has been the registered owner of the property
since 18
September 2014, having acquired it from the previous owner, his
father, who is the second respondent.
[5]
The appellants began residing on the property in 1988,
following the
first appellant’s employment by the second respondent as a
gardener. The first appellant retired in 2012 due
to ill health,
however, both appellants continued to reside on the property with the
consent of the second respondent. In 2014,
ownership of the property
was transferred from the second respondent to Stemmet.
[6]
The appellants
live on the property with
their two minor grandchildren, who have been placed in their foster
care. They occupy
a modest two-room dwelling, with
one room serving as a bedroom. An additional prefabricated structure
is used as a kitchen, and
sanitation is provided by an outdoor pit
toilet. The appellants have never paid rent but do cover the cost of
electricity. Their
home is located in a corner of the property,
surrounded by blue gum trees. At the time legal proceedings were
instituted, their
sole source of income was a SASSA pension of R1700.
They had been living on the property for approximately 30 years.
[7]
On 13 September 2018, Mr Stemmet and the second respondent
instituted
eviction proceedings against the appellants in terms of PIE. The
appellants opposed the application on several grounds,
including that
ESTA was applicable to the property, and that they qualify as
‘occupiers’ as defined by ESTA. Additionally,
on 29 May
2019, the appellants launched an application to confirm and enforce
their rights in terms of ESTA.
[8]
Both applications were heard together in the Bellville
Magistrates’
Court on 4 April 2022. The Magistrate dismissed the ESTA application
and granted an eviction order in terms
of PIE, directing the
appellants to vacate the property (the PIE ruling). The appellants
appealed the PIE ruling to the Western
Cape High Court and the
dismissal of the ESTA application to the LCC. By agreement between
the parties, the hearing of the PIE
appeal was postponed pending the
outcome of the ESTA appeal.
[9]
Section 3(5) of ESTA
provides that for the purposes of civil proceedings in terms of ESTA,
a person who has continuously and openly
resided on land for a period
of three years shall be deemed to have done so with the knowledge of
the owner or person in charge.
The appellants qualify as occupiers in
terms of s 1 of ESTA, having resided on the property
on
(and before) 4 February 1997 with the consent of the respondents
and earning incomes below the threshold prescribed by the
Act.
[4]
However,
if
the
property is not situated on land that falls within the ambit of ESTA,
the appellants cannot claim the benefit of being ‘occupiers’
under ESTA, regardless of the consent granted for their occupation or
their income level.
[10]
The LCC dismissed the ESTA appeal on 3 February 2023. The court
found
that the property falls within the boundaries of a township and
that it was not land designated for agricultural purposes.
Accordingly,
the court held that the eviction of the appellants was
not governed by ESTA, but rather by the PIE. It is this order that is
the
subject of the appeal before this Court. The appeal is with leave
of the LCC.
The application of
ESTA
[11]
The first enquiry is whether the property qualifies as land situated
within
a township that has been ‘established, approved,
proclaimed, or otherwise recognised as such in terms of any law’,
or is surrounded by such a township or townships. If the land does
not
fall within this category, the enquiry ends, and the
provisions of ESTA will apply. However, if the land
does
fall
within this category, a second enquiry arises: whether the land
within such a township has been ‘designated for agricultural
purposes in terms of any law’. If it does, ESTA will apply
notwithstanding the property’s location within the defined
township area.
[12]
In terms of s 2(2) of
ESTA, in proceedings brought in terms of ESTA it is presumed that the
land in question falls within the scope
of ESTA. What this means is
that although the overall burden to prove that ESTA applies in
relation to a specific occupier rests
on the occupier who invokes the
application of ESTA, the land in question will be presumed to fall
within the scope of ESTA unless
the respondents proved the
contrary.
[5]
Does
the property fall within the definition of a township?
[13]
The answer to this
question is factual. The concept of a township has no fixed
definition in ESTA. In
Droomer,
[6]
Binns-Ward J held:
‘
The
word “township” is not defined in ESTA, but the context
in which it is used in s 2 makes it clear that something
more
than just a developed area is required. A “township”
for the purpose of the Act means a development or approved
subdivision that has been formally recognised as such in terms of a
law. That is the effect of the words ‘
established,
approved, proclaimed or otherwise recognised as such in terms of any
law
’
.
. .’ (Citation omitted.)
[14]
It is not in dispute that
the land on which the property is situated, as well as the
surrounding land, has not been formally registered
as a township nor
officially proclaimed as such in the Provincial Gazette. Section 2 of
ESTA, however, does not limit the exclusion
only to land in a
township established, approved or proclaimed. It includes as a
category of township one which is otherwise recognised
as such in
terms of any law.
[7]
[15]
The respondents contend
that the property is situated within a township and when the
appellants moved on to the property in January
1988 (which date
precedes the date on which ESTA commenced, being 28 November 1997)
the property had already been ‘converted
from agricultural
land’. Central to the respondents’ argument is that the
subdivision of the original farm into erven
and the registration of
the property in the land register resulted in its incorporation into
a township by operation of law. They
rely on
Grobler
v Phillips,
[8]
in which a similar argument was upheld, and where this Court found
that a township ‘came to be incorporated’, once
the
property’s status as an erf was registered in the land
register.
[16]
The history of the property shows that it was part of the original
farm, Joostenberg
Vlakte 728. In May 1955, a survey was conducted in
terms of which the farm (recorded under Surveyor’s Diagram
number 4544/1955)
was subdivided into several erven. The property in
question formed part of this subdivision and was registered in the
Deeds Registry
as Portion 81 of the Farm Joostenberg Vlakte 728. It
has been assigned both an erf number and a street address, namely Erf
7[...]/8[...]
and 2[...] K[...] Street.
[17]
The Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act 15 of 2013 (SPLUMA)
defines a
township as ‘. . . an area of land divided into erven
and may include public places and roads indicated as such on a
general
plan’. SPLUMA does not require the existence of a
general plan showing public places as a prerequisite for an area to
qualify
as a township. It is sufficient that the property forms part
of land that has been subdivided into erven.
[18]
Township is also addressed in the Land Survey Act 8 of 1997 (the
LSA), which
describes it as: ‘. . . subdivisions of a piece of
land, which are combined with public spaces and are used mainly for
residential,
industrial, business or similar purposes’.
Similarly, the Cape Townships Ordinance defines township as ‘a
group of
pieces of land, or subdivisions of a piece of land, or
subdivision of a piece of land which are combined with public spaces
and
are used mainly for residential, industrial or similar purposes,
or are intended to be so used’. In both definitions in SPLUMA
and the LSA, the presence of public spaces is a key feature. The term
‘public space’ is defined as any open or enclosed
area,
such as a street or road, depicted on a general plan or diagram,
intended for use by the general public and owned by or vested
in the
municipal council.
[19]
According to the locality map attached to the appellants’
founding affidavit,
the property is situated among other subdivided
erven and is integrated with public places such as K[...] and Owl
Streets, which
run alongside the subdivided properties, separating it
from Paarl Farms. Notably, K[...] Street is also marked on the
Surveyor
General diagram as ‘Road’, aligning it with the
definition of a public space in terms of SPLUMA.
[20]
The evidence submitted by
the respondents supports the conclusion that the property was not
only subdivided into erven but also
registered accordingly,
consistent with the principles in
Grobler
v Phillips
.
[9]
The respondents have, on a balance of probabilities, established that
the land in question meets the definitions set out in SPLUMA,
the
LSA, and the Cape Townships Ordinance. On the facts presented, the
LCC correctly found that the property is situated on land
that falls
within the boundaries of a township for the purposes of s 2(1) of
ESTA.
Is
the property nevertheless designated for agricultural purposes?
[21]
This brings me to the second enquiry: whether the property,
although situated on land within a township, has ‘been
designated
for agricultural purposes in terms
of any law’, as contemplated in s 2(1)
(a)
of ESTA.
[22]
In interpreting this
section, a court is required to adopt a purposive approach, in line
with s 39(2) of the Constitution, which
mandates that legislation
must be construed in a manner that promotes the spirit, purport and
objects of the Bill of Rights. In
Goedgelegen,
the
Constitutional Court emphasised that ESTA is remedial legislation,
closely tied to the Constitution, aimed at protecting individuals
whose tenure to land is insecure. The Court cautioned against a
narrow, text-bound reading of the statue, and affirmed that its
provisions must be construed in a way that affords occupiers the
fullest possible protection of their constitutional rights.
[10]
[23]
The term ‘designated’
means ‘to officially give a specified status’.
[11]
In determining whether the property has been ‘designated for
agricultural
purposes
’
,
its zoning is a key consideration (my emphasis). This is because
zoning confers an officially recognised purpose to land for specific
use objectives.
[12]
The City
of Cape Town’s Development Management Scheme (DMS) which falls
under the City of Cape Town Municipal Planning By-Law
of 2015 (the
By-Law)
[13]
and which gives
effect to certain requirements in SPLUMA, defines ‘zoning’
to mean ‘a land use category prescribed
by the development
management scheme regulating the use of and development of land and
setting out: (a) the purpose for which land
may be used; and (b) the
development rules applicable to that land use category’.
[24]
The zoning of the property has legal effect by virtue of the
provisions of
s 26 of SPLUMA. This was confirmed in
Droomer,
where
the court held:
‘
.
. . Zoning schemes (or “land use schemes” as they are
called under the current nomenclature) used to have legal effect
in
this Province by virtue of the provisions of the Land Use Planning
Ordinance 15 of 1985, and have continued to do so latterly
in terms
of
s 26
of the
Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act 16
of 23
. There is no doubt that they count as ‘law’ within
the meaning defined in s 2 of the Interpretation Act 33 of
1957.’
[14]
[25]
It is not in dispute that, in terms of the DMS, the property in
question is
zoned ‘rural’ (RU). Annexure A to the By-Law
(Part 2: Rural Zoning (RU)) provides that:
‘
RU
zoning accommodates smaller rural properties that may be used for
agriculture, but which may also be occupied as places of residence
by
people who seek a country lifestyle, and who view agriculture as a
secondary reason for occupying the property. Such properties
may
occur inside or outside a recognised urban edge’.
A
property zoned rural is afforded certain ‘use rights’,
with primary uses including a dwelling house, agriculture,
and
additional use rights allowing, among other things, a bed and
breakfast establishment and home childcare.
[26]
The respondents contend that the rural zoning of the property
is not
determinative. They argue that it is not zoned ‘agricultural’,
is neither currently used nor intended for agricultural
purposes
under the DMS, and lacks economic viability as an agricultural unit.
According to them, the property is earmarked for
urban development
and is not designated for present agricultural use in terms of any
applicable legislation.
[27]
When the established principles of interpretation are applied to the
relevant
provisions of the DMS, it becomes apparent that the
distinction drawn by the respondents (and the LCC) between rural and
agricultural
zoning is artificial and cannot be sustained. Items 108
and 112 of the DMS deal with the permitted uses of properties zoned
as
agricultural and rural respectively. Item 108(a) of the DMS
provides that the primary uses of agricultural zoned properties are
agriculture; intensive horticulture; dwelling house; riding stables;
environmental conservation use; environmental facilities;
rooftop
base telecommunication station; minor freestanding base
telecommunication station; minor rooftop base telecommunication
station; and additional use rights as listed in Item 108(b). Item
112(a) of the DMS provides that the primary uses of rural zoned
properties are dwelling house; agriculture; and additional use rights
as listed in item 112(b).
[28]
Accordingly, a plain
reading of items 108(a) and 112(a) of the DMS confirms that
properties zoned as agricultural and those zoned
as rural may, as a
primary use, be utilised for both agricultural and residential
purposes. Moreover, properties zoned as
agricultural may also
be used for non-agricultural purposes, such as a rooftop base
telecommunication station, minor freestanding
base telecommunication
station, and minor rooftop base telecommunication station. It
is only in respect of the consent use
of ‘agricultural
industry’ that the DMS requires agriculture to remain the
dominant use of properties zoned agricultural.
In such cases, the
agricultural industry must be subservient to the primary agricultural
use and must not adversely affect the
agricultural potential of the
property.
[15]
[29]
The additional use
rights
[16]
set out in items
108(b) and 112(b) of the DMS are identical for both agricultural and
rural zoned properties. Similarly, the consent
use rights
[17]
set out in items 108(b) and 112(b) of the DMS are substantially the
same, with the exception that properties zoned as agricultural
can,
with the approval of the City of Cape Town, be used for purposes such
as a hotel, utility service and renewable energy infrastructure.
[30]
The LCC concluded that land zoned ‘agricultural’ retains
that status
unless formally rezoned, while land zoned ‘rural’
is inherently more flexible, allowing for residential or agricultural
use and potentially losing its agricultural character through
residential use alone. However, this interpretation is not supported
by the DMS. On the contrary, the DMS expressly permits a wide range
of non-agricultural uses—including mining—on land
zoned
as agricultural, indicating that zoning alone does not strictly
determine the land’s character. This reasoning, which
treats
‘rural’ zoning as unconstrained by agricultural purpose,
undermines the statutory protections afforded by ESTA.
Section 2 of
ESTA determines the type of land to which the Act applies, and the
LCC’s approach is inconsistent with both
ESTA’s purpose
and the actual provisions of the DMS.
[31]
In
Mkangeli
v Joubert
,
[18]
this Court held that the designation of land as rural does not
exclude such land from the ambit of ESTA.
‘
Generally
speaking
ESTA
protects a particular class of impecunious tenant on rural and
semi-rural land
against
eviction from that land . . . It seems . . . that . . . the
Legislature intended to impose extensive limitations on any
right to
seek the occupiers’ eviction from that land. This intention
appears to be emphasised by the plain wording of ss
9(1) and 23(1) of
ESTA [which prescribe that] an occupier may be evicted only on the
authority of a court order . . . A literal
interpretation of these
provisions appears to
indicate
an intention on the part of the Legislature that any right to have an
occupier evicted, regardless of who may be the holder
of such right
and whatever the source of such right may be, should be subject to
and limited by the provisions of ESTA.
’
[19]
(Emphasis added.)
[32]
The property’s lack
of current agricultural use, and the intention not to use it for
agricultural purposes, is thus irrelevant
to the enquiry into whether
the property falls within the ambit of ESTA. This principle was
confirmed by this Court in
Lebowa
Platinum Mines Ltd v Viljoen
,
[20]
where it held that a former operations supervisor of a registered
mining company qualified as an occupier for the purposes of ESTA,
despite the fact that neither the property nor the individual was
engaged in any agricultural activities. The property in question
was
a farm used for residential purposes in terms of a permit issued to
it by the Department of Minerals and Energy, and the appellant
had
constructed several residential houses on the property to attract
qualified staff for its mining operations, offering accommodation
at
a nominal rental.
Likewise,
in
Droomer
,
the court emphasised that actual or intended agricultural use is not
determinative; what matters is whether the land is designated
for
agricultural purposes in terms of a law, such as through zoning,
which confers an official land-use status.
[21]
[33]
The evidence in this case
clearly established that the property is designated for agricultural
purposes, which is ordinarily implied
by land zoned as ‘rural’.
[22]
The LCC erred in
treating 'rural' zoning as materially distinct from agricultural
designation for the purposes of ESTA. This interpretation
overlooks
the fact that, under planning instruments such as the DMS, rural
zoning, absent a formal change in land use, ordinarily
includes
agricultural use. By disregarding this, the LCC effectively stripped
the land of its agricultural character without proper
legal basis,
thereby circumventing the application of s 2 of ESTA.
[34]
In terms of s 2(1)(
a
) of ESTA, the designation of the property
brings it within the ambit of ESTA, notwithstanding its location
within a township. Furthermore,
the appellants have resided on the
property with the respondents’ knowledge and consent since
1988. They therefore qualify
as ‘occupiers’ as
contemplated in ESTA.
[35]
The appellants are entitled to the protections afforded under
ESTA. The
respondents were therefore required to terminate their
rights of residence in accordance with ESTA before seeking an
eviction order.
[36]
In the result the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Land Claims Court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
a.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
b.
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following:
i.
The property registered in the Deeds Registry as Portion 81 of the
Farm Joostenberg
Vlakte 728 is subject to the Extension of Security
of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA).
ii.
The appellants as long-term ESTA occupiers are entitled to the
protections under ESTA.
iii.
No order as to costs.
L
WINDELL
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellants:
M Adhikari
Instructed by:
J D Van der Merwe
Attorneys, Stellenbosch
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the
respondents:
N Matthee
Instructed by:
Bill Tolken
Henrikse Inc., Cape Town
MM Hattingh
Attorneys Inc, Bloemfontein
[1]
Molusi
and Others v Voges NO and Others
[2016]
ZACC 6
;
2016 (3) SA 370
(CC) para 7;
Department
of Land Affairs v Goedgelegen Tropical Fruits (Pty) Ltd
[2007] ZACC 12
;
2007 (6) SA 199
(CC)
para 53
(Goedgelegen).
[2]
Droomer
NO and Another v Snyders and Others
[2020]
ZAWCHC 72
;
2020 JDR 1555 (WCC)
(Droomer
)
para 12.
[3]
Chapter IV of ESTA (ss 8-15).
[4]
Regulations under ESTA, Government Notice R1632 in Government
Gazette 19587 of 18 December 1998.
[5]
Frannero
Property Investments 202 (Pty) Ltd v Selapa and Others (University
of the Free State Law Clinic as amicus curiae)
[2022]
ZASCA 61
(SCA);
2022 (5) SA 361
(SCA) para 26.
[6]
Droomer
fn
2
para
15.
[7]
See
Greeff
and 21 Others v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZALCC 22
, in which the court found that the Electricity Act was a
law which recognised that Eskom could establish what was in fact a
township
without having to duplicate the process of engaging a
provincial or local administration for approval or to pass a
proclamation.
[8]
Grobler
v Phillips and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 100
para 35,
confirmed
by the Constitutional Court on appeal in
Grobler
v Phillips and Others
[2022]
ZACC 32
;
2023
(1) SA 321
para
14.
[9]
Supra
fn 8.
[10]
Goedgelegen
supra
fn
1 para 53.
[11]
Shorter
Oxford
English Dictionary 6 ed (2007).
[12]
Droomer
para
18.
[13]
The DMS is Schedule 3 to the City of Cape Town Municipal Planning
By-Law. Annexure A.
[14]
Droomer
para
17.
[15]
DMS item 110.
[16]
The additional use rights for properties zoned rural and those zoned
as agricultural are a second dwelling and home occupation,
or a bed
and breakfast establishment, or home child care.
[17]
‘
Consent
use
’
is
defined in Item 1 of the DMS to mean ‘
a
land use permitted in terms of a particular zoning with the approval
of the City
’
.
[18]
Mkangeli
v Joubert
2002
(4) SA 36 (SCA).
[19]
Ibid
paras 9; 17-18.
[20]
Lebowa
Platinum Mines Ltd v Viljoen
2009
(3) SA 511
paras 18-19.
[21]
Droomer
para
18.
[22]
Ibid
para 17.
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