Case Law[2024] ZASCA 33South Africa
Glowing Rooms (Pty) Ltd v Levin N O and Others (468/2023) [2024] ZASCA 33 (28 March 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
28 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Contract law – whether the eviction order was properly granted – whether the respondents had a right to cancel the lease agreement – whether their conduct amounted to repudiation of the agreement – whether court should have developed the common law in accordance with constitutional norms and values to refuse the eviction.
Judgment
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## Glowing Rooms (Pty) Ltd v Levin N O and Others (468/2023) [2024] ZASCA 33 (28 March 2024)
Glowing Rooms (Pty) Ltd v Levin N O and Others (468/2023) [2024] ZASCA 33 (28 March 2024)
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sino date 28 March 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 468/2023
In
the matter between:
GLOWING
ROOMS (PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
ARTHUR
LEVIN N
O
FIRST RESPONDENT
ALAN
MARK LOCKETZ N
O
SECOND RESPONDENT
MICHAEL
LARRY NOVOS N
O
THIRD RESPONDENT
SEYMOUR
MICHAEL ABRAHAMS N O
FOURTH RESPONDENT
(Respondents
cited in their capacities as trustees
for
the time being of The Woodlands Trust)
Neutral
citation:
Glowing
Rooms (Pty) Ltd v Levin N O & Others
(468/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 33
(28 March 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MBATHA, MABINDLA-BOQWANA,
WEINER and KGOELE JJA
Heard:
20 February 2024
Delivered:
28 March 2024
Summary:
Contract
law –
whether
the eviction order was properly granted – whether the
respondents had a right to cancel the lease agreement –
whether
their conduct amounted to repudiation of the agreement –
whether court should have developed the common law in accordance
with
constitutional norms and values to refuse the eviction.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division
of the High Court, Cape Town (Savage J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, save for the variation of the date of
eviction.
2
The
order of the high court is substituted with the following:
‘
1.
The
respondent, Glowing Rooms (Pty) Ltd, as well as its employees,
agents, assigns and any other person/s that may occupy Unit 16
Gallery, Turf Club Drive, Milnerton, Western Cape (“the
premises”) are to vacate the premises on or before 30 June
2024.
2.
Should
the respondent, as well as its employees, agents, assigns and any
other person/s that occupy the premises
vis-á-vis
the
respondent, fail to vacate the premises voluntarily as set out in
paragraph 1 above, the sheriff is authorised to evict the
respondent,
its employees, agents, assigns and any other person/s that may occupy
the premises
vis-á-vis
the respondent on 1 July 2024,
or as soon thereafter as possible.
3.
The
respondent is to pay the costs of this application on the scale as
between attorney and client.’
JUDGMENT
Nicholls
JA (Mbatha, Mabindla-Boqwana, Weiner & Kgoele JJA concurring):
[1]
This
is an appeal against a judgment of the Western Cape Division of the
High Court, Cape Town (the high court), which granted an
eviction
order against the appellant from a commercial property, pursuant to a
notice of termination in terms of a lease. The central
issue in this
appeal is whether the eviction order was properly granted or whether
the respondents repudiated the lease agreement,
and whether on proper
interpretation of the agreement as a whole, the respondents had a
right to ‘unilaterally’ cancel
the agreement. In
addition, whether the court should have developed the common law in
accordance with constitutional norms and
values, to refuse the
eviction.
[2]
The
appellant is Glowing Rooms (Pty) Ltd (Glowing Rooms). On 2 July 2016,
Glowing Rooms entered into a lease agreement with the
Woodlands Trust
(the Trust) (the first agreement) in terms of which it leased a unit
in a retail development, the Gallery, located
in an industrial area
near the Milnerton Race Course in Cape Town (the premises). The
premises were utilised as an indoor
3D mini golf course, which
operated only on Saturdays and Sundays. The trustees of the Woodlands
Trust are the respondents herein.
The first agreement of lease was
for a period of three years, commencing on 1 September 2016 and
terminating on 31 August 2019.
A second lease agreement was
entered into on 27 February 2020 for another three years, commencing
on 1 September 2019
and terminating on 31 August 2022. In July
and August 2022, the parties attempted to negotiate a new lease
agreement.
[3]
It
was disputed between the parties whether pursuant to these
negotiations, a new lease came into existence. Glowing Rooms insisted
that the parties had entered into a new lease agreement on the same
terms as the previous one. That a new lease agreement had been
concluded was disputed by the Trust, which alleged that once the
second lease agreement was terminated by the effluxion of time,
the
negotiations for a new lease agreement during July and August 2022
had been unsuccessful.
[4]
Because,
at least on the Trust’s version, no agreement had been reached,
it entered into a lease agreement with a third party,
Tambudzai Perky
Umera, commencing on 1 September 2022. Ms Umera leased not only
the premises in question, but also two other
units in the Gallery. As
a director of a non-profit educational institution, she intended to
set up a school. To this end, the
Trust agreed to undertake
renovations and to give Ms Umera vacant occupation of the premises on
1 January 2023.
[5]
Glowing
Rooms refused to vacate the premises and denied that it had any legal
obligation to do so. It claimed that a lease agreement
had been
concluded on 26 August 2022, pursuant to the acceptance of an offer
made by the Trust. As a result, on 6 October
2022, the Trust
instituted an urgent application to evict Glowing Rooms from the
premises on the basis that the second lease agreement
had been
terminated by the effluxion of time and that Glowing Rooms was
accordingly in unlawful occupation of the premises. Glowing
Rooms
pleaded that a further lease agreement had been entered into on the
same terms and conditions as the second lease agreement,
which had
commenced on 1 September 2019.
[6]
On
28 October 2022, the high court (per Kusevitsky J), dismissed the
eviction application (the first eviction application). No reasons
were provided for the order, but it is common cause between the
parties that the basis for the dismissal of the eviction application
was that the high court found that the parties had entered into a new
lease agreement pursuant to the negotiations in July and
August 2022,
despite it not having been reduced to writing.
[7]
The
trustees, apparently having accepted the court’s ruling, as
indeed they were obliged to, then proceeded on the basis that
there
was an extant lease agreement on the same terms and conditions as the
second lease agreement, as contended for by Glowing
Rooms. Of
particular significance is clause 2.1 of the lease agreement, which
provides that the duration of the lease will be three
years ‘subject
to the Lessor’s right to cancel this agreement on one month’s
notice’. Clause 2.2 provides
that the lessee shall have an
option to renew the lease on two months’ written notice. It is
common cause that Glowing Rooms
did not give two months’
written notice to renew the second lease agreement.
[8]
On
the same day, and immediately after Kusevitsky J’s ruling in
the first eviction application, on 28 October 2022, the Trust
sent a
notice to Glowing Rooms terminating the lease agreement in terms of
clause 2.1, on one month’s notice, and requiring
Glowing Rooms
to vacate by not later than 30 November 2022. The third paragraph of
the notice reads as follows:
‘
Insofar
as Glowing Rooms (Pty) Ltd (“Glowing Rooms”) allege that
the parties have entered into a new lease agreement,
on the same
terms and conditions as the previous lease agreement dated 27
February 2020, save for the change in Glowing Rooms’
rental
obligation [the Trust] hereby gives Glowing Rooms notice, in terms of
clause 2.1. of the alleged agreement, that it has
elected to
CANCEL
the alleged agreement, and this letter serves as notice thereof.’
(Emphasis added.)
[9]
Again,
Glowing Rooms refused to vacate in terms of the notice, which
resulted in the Trust instituting the present proceedings,
seeking
eviction for the second time. In the second eviction application,
which is the subject matter of this appeal, the Trust
based its case
on its contractual right to evict in terms of clause 2.1 of the lease
agreement.
[10]
The
high court, per Savage J, granted the eviction application but
determined that the eviction should take place on or before 31
December 2022, instead of 30 November 2022. In the exercise of
its discretion to determine a reasonable date for the eviction,
the
high court took into consideration that Glowing Rooms had been a
tenant for many years and would require some time to relocate.
The
high court refused an application for leave to appeal by Glowing
Rooms. Leave to appeal was granted by this Court.
[11]
Glowing
Rooms’ appeal is based on four grounds. In this appeal, as in
the high court, Glowing Rooms’ primary defence
is that public
policy considerations mitigate against the enforcement of clause 2.1.
Aligned to this, is the duty to negotiate
in good faith. The next
aspect of Glowing Rooms’ argument is that the Trust repudiated
the lease agreement and was therefore
not in a position to assert a
contractual right in terms thereof. The third point related to the
validity of the notice to terminate.
Finally, Glowing Rooms contended
that on a proper interpretation of the lease agreement, clause 2.1
should be seen as part of the
whole agreement, which incorporated
several other clauses providing for termination on notice, in defined
circumstances. By relying
on it in isolation, the Trust impermissibly
abrogated to itself an unfettered discretion to terminate the lease
on one month’s
notice.
[12]
The
starting point should be whether the Trust repudiated the lease
agreement, as this would be dispositive of its claim for eviction.
The basis for Glowing Rooms’ argument is that in the first
eviction application, the Trust contended that no lease was concluded
after the second lease agreement expired, on 31 August 2022, through
the effluxion of time. It could not, therefore, rely on a
term of an
agreement, which it alleged did not exist, to evict Glowing Rooms
without expressly disavowing its initial stance. The
notice in terms
of clause 2.1 also referred to an ‘alleged agreement’
indicating, according to Glowing Rooms, that
the Trust had not
accepted that there was an extant lease agreement, thereby
repudiating the lease agreement. In fact, argued Glowing
Rooms,
nothing short of a written acceptance of an extant lease agreement
would suffice, absent which this Court should find that
the Trust had
repudiated the lease agreement.
[13]
What
this contention overlooks is that the Trust’s first application
for eviction had been dismissed by Kusevitsky J, on the
basis that
there was an extant lease agreement. That these were the grounds for
the high court’s dismissal of the eviction
application, was
emphasised repeatedly by Glowing Rooms. Once the trustees accepted
the decision of the high court, as they were
compelled to do, their
denial of the existence of the lease in the first eviction
application could have no bearing on their subsequent
conduct in
utilising the terms of the lease to procure an eviction in this
application. After the decision of the high court apparently
based on
an extant lease agreement, the only avenue open to the Trust, in
order to evict Glowing Rooms, was to do so in terms of
the lease
agreement. There is, therefore, nothing to prevent the Trust from
relying on a contractual right to cancel the lease
agreement.
[14]
This
Court, in
Datacolour
International (Pty) Ltd v Intamarket
,
[1]
held that repudiatory conduct must be objective. The proper test is
whether a notional reasonable person would conclude that proper
performance (in accordance with a true interpretation of the
agreement) will not be forthcoming. The conduct must be clear cut
and
unequivocal, as repudiation is not lightly presumed. The Court
further held that repudiation occurs ‘where one party
to a
contract, without lawful grounds, indicates to the other party in
words or by conduct a deliberate and unequivocal intention
no longer
to be bound by the contract.’
[2]
Repudiation is not a matter of intention, but rather of perception
and the perception being that of the reasonable person.
[15]
The
use of the words ‘insofar as Glowing Rooms allege that the
parties have entered in to a new lease agreement . . .’
cannot
amount to an unequivocal intention not to be bound by the lease
agreement, particularly once a court had for all intents
and purposes
held that there was an existing lease agreement, to which the Trust
was bound. While the Trust might have initially
denied the existence
of the agreement, the very fact that it brought its second eviction
application in terms of the lease agreement
after the first eviction
application was dismissed, points to conduct which is the exact
opposite of a party refusing to perform
in terms of a contract. As
such, the defence of repudiation is unsustainable.
[16]
The
next question is whether the notice of termination was valid. Glowing
Rooms’ contention, in this regard, is that the notice,
by the
use of the words ‘insofar as’ and the reference to an
‘alleged’ agreement being concluded, implied
that it did
not consider itself to be bound by the agreement. It was submitted
that where there is no clear and unequivocal intention
to be bound by
the agreement, a notice of termination is invalid. For this
contention, reliance was placed on
Kragga
Kamma Estates CC and Another v Flanagan
(
Kragga
Kamma
)
[3]
and
Sweet
v Ragerguhara NO and Others
(
Sweet
),
[4]
both dealing with the sale of immovable property. In
Kragga
Kamma
,
the plaintiff claimed that non-payment of a portion of the purchase
price constituted a repudiation of the sale agreement, which
repudiation the seller accepted. This Court held that the notice of
demand was a conditional demand and was incapable of placing
the
defendant
in
mora
as it was subject to some uncertain future event. But even if it
were, the plaintiff had, for other reasons, not validly cancelled
the
sale. The notice was framed in the alternative. It was not clear and
unambiguous. In the present matter, the written notice
is clear and
unambiguous, it is not conditional or contradictory.
[17]
Similarly,
the facts in
Sweet
are distinguishable. There, the applicant sought an order that an
agreement of sale had been lawfully cancelled on the basis that
the
respondent had not given vacant possession of the property in
question. A notice was sent to remedy the defective performance
by
giving vacant possession. The court found that the defaulting party
was entitled to know how to respond to the notice, but in
that
instance, it was equivocal and inconsistent. Here, there is no demand
that Glowing Rooms remedy its breach, as clause 2.1
is not dependent
upon a breach of the agreement.
[18]
There
can be no suggestion that the notice sent to Glowing Rooms is in any
manner contradictory or confusing. The notice clearly
and
unambiguously states that the Trust is exercising a contractual right
in terms of clause 2.1 to terminate the lease agreement
on one
month’s notice. The reference to an ‘alleged’
agreement does not detract from that.
[19]
I
now deal with Glowing Rooms’ argument relating to the
interpretation of the lease agreement. It proceeds along the
following
lines. By relying on clause 2.1, the Trust impermissibly
utilised its unfettered discretion to terminate the lease, when
clause
2.1 should have been interpreted in light of the contract as a
whole. This was in circumstances where there are other clauses in
the
lease agreement which provide for longer notice periods in different
scenarios. For example, in terms of clause 18.1, the Trust
can
terminate on three months’ written notice in the case of the
building being sold; clause 18.2 provides for three months’
written notice in the case of substantial renovations, reconstruction
or redevelopment of the building; clauses 18.3 and 18.4 provide
60 days’ written notice, where the lessee is to be moved
to alternative premises in consequence of renovations being
carried
out; and clause 18.7 provides for three months’ written notice,
if the parties fail to reach agreement within 30
days on an
alternative lease providing for relocation of the business of the
lessee. Clause 22 affords the Trust the right to terminate
in the
case of destruction of property or damage which renders it
unlettable, upon 60 days’ notice.
[20]
In
its answering affidavit, Glowing Rooms stated that the lease
agreement grants the Trust an array of unilateral contractual powers
as set out in clauses 18 and 22, without any qualification that they
be exercised in accordance with the judgment of a reasonable
person.
As such, all these clauses were contrary to public policy and
invalid, not only clause 2.1. Further, Glowing Rooms contended
that
this is disproportionate and does not take into account the rights
and interests of both parties.
[21]
Significantly,
it was not Glowing Rooms’ case in the high court that it ought
to have been given a longer notice period, in
line with the other
clauses. Nor did it contend on appeal before this Court, that these
other clauses were themselves, contrary
to public policy. In this
Court, counsel for Glowing Rooms specifically stated that clause 2.1
per se
is not unlawful and contrary to public policy. Rather, it was the
interpretation and implementation thereof that was the fundamental
problem, thus linking the interpretation of the contract to whether
it was contrary to public policy. Glowing Rooms argued that
a
contract which provides for a unilateral right to terminate by
written notice and ‘to implement a contracting party’s
act of repudiation’, amounts to ‘abuse of a contractual
right’. It was further argued that the Trust’s
abuse of
the contractual right to further an act of repudiation or breach, is
contrary to public policy.
[22]
This
argument is difficult to understand. Our courts have repeatedly
confirmed that public policy demands that contracts freely
and
consciously entered into must be honoured.
[5]
The principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
(agreements must be kept) gives effect to ‘central
constitutional values of freedom and dignity’. The
qualification
is that, in our constitutional dispensation, it is not
the only principle to be applied. Furthermore, where constitutional
rights
and values are implicated, there must be a careful balancing
act.
[6]
While there is recognition of the role of equity (encompassing the
notions of good faith, fairness and reasonableness), as a factor
in
assessing the terms and enforcement of a contract, it has been
emphasised that a court cannot refuse to enforce contractual
provisions on the basis that to do so would be unfair, unreasonable
or unduly harsh.
[7]
[23]
In
our present contractual regime, the starting point is that a
contracting party is entitled to specific performance of any
contractual
right. Notions of good faith and fairness have not been
elevated to substantive rules of contract. While these values play an
important
role in our law of contract, they do not provide a
free-standing basis on which a court may interfere in contractual
relationships.
It is only where a term is so unfair, unreasonable or
unjust that it is contrary to public policy that a court may refuse
to enforce
it.
[8]
This
Court has held that to coerce a lessor to conclude a lease agreement
with a party it no longer wants as a tenant would be contrary
to
public policy.
[9]
[24]
Applying
the above principles to the facts of this case, Glowing Rooms
voluntarily entered into a commercial lease in 2016. It was
renewed
in 2019 and, as was successfully argued by Glowing Rooms in the first
eviction application, it was renewed yet again. Clause
2.1 featured
in all the agreements. At no point did Glowing Rooms object to the
inclusion of the clause, on the grounds that it
was too onerous or in
any manner unfair. It accepted all the clauses of the lease agreement
without demur. It was not disputed
that the case it advanced in the
first eviction application was that the lease agreement should be
accepted in all its terms. It
is not open to Glowing Rooms now to
assert that the exercise of the terms of the lease agreement is
contrary to public policy and
therefore of no force and effect.
Despite Glowing Rooms’ averment that the eviction constitutes
an unlawful infringement
of their constitutional right to ‘practice
[their] trade and occupation as business persons’, this is a
purely commercial
lease. There is no element of contractual
oppression or disproportionate bargaining power. There are no grounds
for finding that
clause 2.1 is contrary to public policy.
[25]
On
the aspect of good faith, Glowing Rooms contends that where a lease
agreement provides that the lessor has the unilateral right
to
terminate the lease, this should give rise to a duty to negotiate in
good faith. Such a duty, as a bare minimum, should preclude
a party
from purporting to unilaterally cancel without first presenting a
formal written lease agreement for acceptance. Glowing
Rooms calls on
this Court to develop the common law in this regard.
[26]
This,
too, is premised on a misconception of the Court’s right to
develop the common law. In
Everfresh
Market Virginia (Pty) Ltd v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd
(
Everfresh
),
[10]
the applicant sought to develop the law of contract in light of
s 39(2) of the Constitution, so that the common law would
require parties who undertake to negotiate a new rental for a renewed
term of the lease to do so in good faith. The majority refused
the
invitation. It held that only where the common law is deficient are
the courts under a general obligation to develop it. The
first
inquiry is whether the common law viewed in the light of s 39(2)
requires development, and if so, the second inquiry
is how.
[11]
Litigants who seek to invoke provisions of s 39(2) must plead
their case in the court of first instance. The applicant in
Everfresh
did not plead dire consequences, commercial or otherwise, that might
ensue if the lease were not renewed. Nor did it suggest that
it had
lacked proper legal representation or that it was poorly advised or
indeed suffered from any form of vulnerability springing
from unequal
bargaining power. The Constitutional Court, while acknowledging that
where there is a contractual obligation to negotiate,
it would be
unimaginable that constitutional values would not require that the
negotiations be in good faith, drew a distinction
where the dispute
was of a purely commercial nature. This is to be distinguished from
Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security
(
Carmichele
),
[12]
where fundamental rights were at stake.
[27]
So,
too, this matter, is purely a commercial dispute about commercial
premises. No fundamental rights are implicated. Glowing Rooms
makes
no case that if it loses these premises, it will be unable to find
any other, or that these premises are of any special value
or
importance. Quite the contrary, during negotiations in July 2022,
Glowing Rooms’ director wrote to the Trust saying: ‘[w]e
are [al]ready in negotiations with various agents/landlords and there
is a lot of free space available for a much lower rate at
very good
locations.’
[13]
Furthermore, because Glowing Rooms was obliged to ‘redo/freshen-up’
the mini golf course, ‘a move to another
premises would solve
that problem as well.’ This suggests a willingness to relocate.
Nothing on the facts of this matter
indicates that there is a need to
develop the common law. There is no contractual duty to negotiate and
any reliance on a general
duty to negotiate in good faith is
misplaced.
[28]
For
the above reasons, the appeal must fail. All that remains is whether
this Court should use its discretion to extend the date
of eviction
to enable Glowing Rooms to relocate to new premises. Counsel for the
trustees, without conceding, accepted that it
would not be
unreasonable to grant Glowing Rooms a three months’ notice of
eviction. Insofar as costs are concerned, the
scale of costs in the
high court was on the attorney and client scale as governed by the
lease agreement. There is no reason to
grant attorney and client
costs in this appeal.
[29]
In
the result, the following order is made:
1
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, save for the variation of the date of
eviction.
2
The
order of the high court is substituted with the following:
‘
1.
The
respondent, Glowing Rooms (Pty) Ltd, as well as its employees,
agents, assigns and any other person/s that may occupy Unit 16
Gallery, Turf Club Drive, Milnerton, Western Cape (“the
premises”) are to vacate the premises on or before 30 June
2024.
2.
Should
the respondent, as well as its employees, agents, assigns and any
other person/s that occupy the premises vis-á-vis
the
respondent, fail to vacate the premises voluntarily as set out in
paragraph 1 above, the sheriff is authorised to evict the
respondent,
its employees, agents, assigns and any other person/s that may occupy
the premises vis-á-vis the respondent,
on 1 July 2024, or as
soon thereafter as possible.
3.
The
respondent is to pay the costs of this application on the scale as
between attorney and client.’
C
E HEATON NICHOLLS
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
H J O (Wallis) Roux
Instructed
by:
Brits
& Matthee Attorneys, Somerset West
Brits
& Matthee Inc, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: F S G Sievers SC
Instructed
by:
Smith Tabata Buchanan Boyes, Cape Town
Webber
Attorneys Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Datacolour
International (Pty) Ltd v Intamarket
[2000] ZASCA 82
;
2001 (2) SA 284
(SCA);
[2001] 1 All SA 581
(A) paras 16, 17 and 18.
[2]
Ibid para 16, quoting Corbett JA in
Nash
v Golden Dumps
1985 (3) SA 1
(A) at 22 D-F.
[3]
Kragga
Kamma Estates CC and Another v Flanagan
[1994] ZASCA 137
;
1995 (2) SA 367
(A);
[1995] 1 All SA 486
(A) at 374 H-J – 375
A-E.
[4]
Sweet
v Ragerguhara NO and Others
1978 (1) SA 131
(D) at 139 E-G.
[5]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC);
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
[2020]
ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC);
Botha
v Rich N.O.
[2014] ZACC 11
;
2014 (4) SA 124
(CC);
2014 (7) BCLR 741
(CC);
AB
v Pridwin Preparatory School
[2018] ZASCA 150
;
2019 (1) SA 327
(SCA).
[6]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
[2020] ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC)
(
Beadica
)
para 83, quoting
Barkhuhizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC) para 57.
[7]
Beadica
para 80.
[8]
Ibid
para
79 and 80.
[9]
Rozaar
CC v Falls Supermarket CC
[2017]
ZASCA 166
;
[2018] 1 All SA 438
(SCA);
2018 (3) SA 76
(SCA) para 24.
[10]
Everfresh
Market Virginia (Pty) Ltd v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd
[2011] ZACC 30
;
2012 (1) SA 256
(CC);
2012 (3) BCLR 219
(CC).
[11]
Ibid para 30 quoting
Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security
[2001]
ZACC 22
;
2001 (4) SA 938
(CC);
2001 (10) BCLR 995
(CC) (
Carmichele
)
paras 39-40.
[12]
Carmichele
.
[13]
See
respondent’s heads of argument para 11.
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