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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Nel & Others v Cilliers (197/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 57 (19 April 2024)
Nel & Others v Cilliers (197/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 57 (19 April 2024)
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sino date 19 April 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no:
197/2023
In
the matter between:
J
J G
NEL
FIRST
APPELLANT
IVY
JEWEL 3 (PTY)
LTD
SECOND APPELLANT
IVY
JEWEL 4 (PTY)
LTD
THIRD APPELLANT
LABONTE
1 (PTY)
LTD
FOURTH APPELLANT
LABONTE
2 (PTY)
LTD
FIFTH APPELLANT
SILKBLAZE
3 (PTY)
LTD
SIXTH APPELLANT
SILKBLAZE
4 (PTY) LTD
SEVENTH APPELLANT
RUSTYROSE
52 (PTY) LTD
EIGHTH APPELLANT
and
P
J J
CILLIERS
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Nel & Others v
Cilliers
(197/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 57
(19 April 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MATOJANE, and MOLEFE JJA, and BAARTMAN and MBHELE AJJA
Heard:
13 March 2024
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 the 19
th
day
of April 2024.
Summary
:
Contract – specific performance – whether either of two
contracts is unlawful and unenforceable for failure to comply
with
section 8 read with section 40 of the National Credit Act, 35 of 2005
(the NCA) – whether the appellants are entitled
to relief in
terms of a contract despite a concession made at a pre-trial
conference that certain clauses in the contract fall
foul of
provisions of the NCA and that those clauses are not severable from
the rest of the contract – whether it was necessary
for the
respondent to have accepted the concession before the appellants
could be held to it – whether parties had
abandoned their
first contract – whether the first contract was inchoate or a
simulated agreement – whether the appellants
were entitled to
relief in respect of either contract.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Ally
AJ, Jansen van Niewenhuizen J and Bokako AJ sitting as a full court):
(a)
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where so
employed.
(b)
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(i)
The defendant is ordered to pay the first plaintiff the amount of
R5 million
plus interest on the amount of R5 million at the rate
of 15.5% from 1 March 2011 to date of payment.
(ii)
The defendant is ordered to pay the costs of the action including all
reserved costs
and the costs consequent upon the employment of two
counsel.’
JUDGMENT
Baartman
AJA (Nicholls, Matojane and Molefe JJA and Mbhele AJA Concurring):
[1]
The dispute in this appeal is whether either of the two contracts
entered into between
Mr JJG Nel (the first appellant) and Mr PPJ
Cilliers (the respondent) is lawful and enforceable. Both the
Pretoria high court (the
trial court) and the full court of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the full court),
dismissed the first appellant’s
claims for specific performance
and damages arising out of various breaches of the two agreements.
This appeal is with special
leave of this Court.
Contractual
history
[2]
The first appellant is a businessman and the controlling mind behind
the
second to the eighth appellants (the companies). The respondent
is an attorney and businessman. In 2006, the respondent was
developing
an upmarket golf estate through Legend Golf and Safari
(Pty) Ltd (the development company) in the Sterkrivier area in
Mpumalanga
when the first appellant approached him and showed an
interest in investing in the development.
[3]
The first appellant and the respondent concluded a sale of shares
agreement
in terms of which the respondent sold 5% of the development
company to the first appellant for R8 million. In 2007, the
respondent
recruited major new investors from Kuwait, which resulted
in a restructuring of the development company. The first appellant
had
the option to exchange his 5% share in the old company for 2.5%
in the restructured entity. He chose to opt out of the development
as
he did not approve of the new investors.
[4]
The respondent, believing that the development would yield good
returns,
advised him against withdrawing as he estimated that his
shares would appreciate to R30 million in three years’ time. He
offered to purchase the first appellant’s shares for R30
million after a period of three years. The first appellant agreed
and
drafted the first agreement (D1), dated 18 February 2008, consisting
of four separate agreements. Relevant to this judgment
is clause 2
which provides the following:
‘
(2)
The sale of shares agreement (the sale of shares agreement) in terms
whereof the respondent purchases the first appellant’s
5% share
in Legend and Safari Resort for R30 million, payable on or before the
end of February 2011, interest free and tax friendly.’
(Own
translation from Afrikaans.)
[5]
Contract D1 further provided that the companies would each purchase
an
erf in the development which the first appellant would finance
through an Absa mortgage bond. The respondent would market two of
the
erven, the profit on which would finance the other five erven. The
respondent made an initial payment of R6 million but defaulted
on his
other obligations. Therefore, on 20 June 2011, to accommodate the
respondent, the parties entered into a second agreement
(D2) and
agreed that the share price would be reduced to R12 million instead
of R30 million.
[6]
In terms of D2, the amount of R6 million that had already been paid
in
terms of D1 was regarded as an initial payment. The respondent
undertook to pay the balance of R6 million in three equal annual
cash
instalments of R2 million each. The payments would attract interest
at the agreed rate. The respondent made one further payment
of R1
million on 31 July 2012 to the first appellant, whereafter all
payments stopped. It was common cause that neither the first
appellant nor the respondent was registered as a credit provider in
terms of the National Credit Act 35 of 2005 (NCA). Litigation
followed.
### The pleadings
The pleadings
[7]
The pleadings in this matter are extremely confusing. It is thus not
surprising
that the parties disagreed about the issues in dispute.
Before this Court, the appellants’ counsel had difficulty
explaining
the pleadings and instead sought to rely on his heads of
argument to clarify the pleaded case and the relief sought, while the
respondent’s counsel sought to rely on amendments not included
in the appeal record.
[8]
The appellants issued summons, seeking specific performance, based on
the terms of D2 as follows:
‘
1.
That the defendant be ordered to design, construct and complete four
fully furnished hotel suites on each of the aforementioned
erven in
accordance with the Residential Design Guidelines issued in terms of
the articles of association of Legend Golf and Safari
Resort Home
Owners Association…
2.
That the defendant be ordered to pay the second to eighth
[plaintiffs’] levies in terms of the articles of association
of
Legend Golf and Safari Resort Home Owners Association…
3.
That the defendant be ordered to pay the second to eighth
[plaintiffs’] municipal rates and taxes in respect of the
aforesaid
erven…
4.
Costs of suit.’
[9]
Alternatively, the appellants sought conditional relief based on D1
as
follows:
‘
Plaintiffs
conditional claim against the defendant for payment of the balance of
the purchase price in terms of a sale of shares
agreement
11.
This claim is subject to the above [High Court] finding that the
agreement attached as D2 is invalid and unenforceable for whatever
reason.’
‘
1
Payment of the amount of R23 million.
2.
Interest on the amount of R23 million at a rate of 15, 5% per annum
from 1 March 2011 to date of payment.
3.
In the alternative to paragraphs 1 and 2 above:
3.1
Payment of the amount of R5 million.
3.2
Interest on the amount of R5 million at Absa Bank’s prime
interest rate plus 3,5%, compounded monthly and calculated from
1
March 2011.
4.
Cost of suit.’
### The 19 August 2020
pre-trial concessions
The 19 August 2020
pre-trial concessions
[10]
The appellants’ counsel made the following formal concession at
a pre-trial conference:
‘
3.2.6. The plaintiffs
concede that clauses 2,3 and 4 of ‘D2’ fall within the
ambit of section 8 of the [NCA]. . . as
alleged in 6.3.1.3 of the
plea.
3.2.7.
The plaintiffs deny that clauses 2, 3 and 4 of ‘D2’
amount to a separate and distinct credit agreement as alleged
in
paragraph 6.3.1.3 of the plea.
3.2.8
The plaintiffs admit that neither the first plaintiff . . . nor the
companies were registered as credit providers as required
by section
40 [of the NCA] as alleged. . .
3.2.11
. . . [I]t would be the plaintiff’s case in argument that
clauses 2, 3 and 4 are invalid but not severable from the
remainder
of ‘D2’ in view of which the whole of ‘D2’
should be held to be invalid and that an amendment
to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim was not necessary to present such an argument.’
### In the trial court
In the trial court
[11]
The first appellant was the only witness in the trial before Baqwa J.
The first appellant
admitted that he had drafted the agreements and
submitted them to the respondent for approval. The latter made minor
changes to
the agreements. However, that admission came after the
first appellant had gone to great length, in examination-in-chief, to
convince
the trial court that the respondent had drafted the
agreements because he was legally trained.
[12]
The first appellant said that he understood figures and the
agreements were structured
in a manner that would be tax effective.
Therefore, the term ‘tax friendly’ meant that there would
be further negotiations
about the tax liability. The first appellant
said that D2 was meant to ‘substitute D1’ because the
respondent had not
performed in terms of that agreement. A reading of
the trial record reveals that the first appellant was not an
impressive witness.
The trial court dismissed the appellants’
claim, holding that the parties had abandoned D1 and that D2 was
‘unlawful
and unenforceable’. However, the learned judge
granted leave to appeal to the full court.
### In the full court
In the full court
[13]
In the full court, the
appellants argued that D2 was not a credit agreement. Instead, so the
submission went, it was ‘a negotiation
or settlement of a
dispute regarding the payment of the R30 000 000. . .
[therefore] in terms of
Ratlou
v Man Financial
Services SA (Pty) Ltd,
[1]
D2 is not a credit agreement in terms of [the NCA] and therefore
neither unlawful nor invalid’. The court reasoned that the
submission ‘firstly flies in the face of the concession made by
the appellants which concession was never withdrawn’,
was
contrary to the pleaded case and to the first appellant’s
testimony. The court further relied on
Du
Bruyn N O
and
Others v Karsten
[2]
in holding that D2 was ‘an unlawful and unenforceable’
credit agreement within the meaning of section 8 read with section
40
of the NCA.
[14]
The court rejected the submission, on behalf of the appellants, that
D1 could be revived
once it found D2 was ‘unlawful and
unenforceable’, because the first appellant had testified that
D2 had replaced D1
which it found was ‘an abandonment of D1,
therefore D1 could not be resuscitated’. The court held that D1
was inchoate.
Although, the respondent did not plead that D1 was
inchoate, the court was persuaded that the first appellant had placed
the issue
before it when he testified that the parties still had to
‘discuss how exactly certain clauses will be performed’.
[15]
The full court held that that testimony ‘clearly evidences
incompleteness’
therefore the appellants could not rely on D1.
In any event, it was further held that the ‘deferment of
payment’ of
R30 million meant that D1 was a credit agreement in
terms of the NCA and as the provisions of that Act had not been
complied with,
D1 was unlawful and unenforceable. Therefore, the
court dismissed the appeal and refused the application for leave to
appeal.
## Discussion
Discussion
[16]
It is necessary to deal with the status of the pre-trial admission
upfront. The appellants
persisted with their claim for specific
performance in terms of D2 despite the pre-trial concession referred
to above. Before this
Court, the appellants’ counsel made the
startling submission that the appellants could not be held to the
concession because
the respondent had not accepted it.
[17]
There is no merit in that submission. Pre-trial proceedings are
important, legally binding
proceedings in which the issues to be
determined at trial are identified and crystallised. The trial
proceeds based on the dispute
that remains after all admissions and
concessions have been made. If that is not the position, the
pre-trial process is a costly
waste of time. In this matter, the
respondent, as he was entitled to, defended the claim based on the
concession made in respect
of D2. The appellants did not withdraw the
concession when they had the opportunity to do so.
[18]
The concession meant that
the appellants then proceeded on the basis that the affected clauses
in D2 were not severable, therefore
the appellants could not place
reliance on that agreement. The full court thus correctly held that
D2 was unlawful and unenforceable
for failure to have complied with
certain of the provisions
[3]
of
the NCA. It follows that the appellants could only obtain relief in
terms of D1 if that contract was lawful and enforceable.
I turn to
that enquiry.
### Is D1 a simulated
agreement?
Is D1 a simulated
agreement?
[19]
The respondent pleaded that D1 was a simulated agreement. A court
considers the substance
of an agreement irrespective of what its form
purports to be. The full court did not consider whether D1 was a
simulated agreement.
In my view, for the reasons I deal with below,
D1 was not a simulated agreement. The full court found that D1 was
inchoate and
therefore the appellants could not rely on it for
relief. I now turn to that finding.
### Was D1 inchoate?
Was D1 inchoate?
[20]
The issue of inchoateness arises in respect of clause 2 of D1 which
provides as follows:
‘
Peet
Cilliers koop Koos Nel se 5% (vyf Persent) aandeel in Legend Golf en
Safari Resort (Pty) (Ltd) vir die bedrag van R30 000 000.00
(dertig miljoen Rand). Vermelde bedrag is betaalbaar voor of op einde
Februarie 2011, is nie rentedraend nie, en die transaksie
sal
“Belasting vriendelik” wees’
([The
respondent] purchases the first appellant’s 5% interest in
Legend Gold and Safari Resort (Pty) Ltd for the amount of
R30 000 000, which amount is payable on or before the end
of February 2011, will not attract interest, and the transaction
would be tax friendly.) (Own translation from Afrikaans.)
[21]
The appellants bemoan their disadvantage as they alleged that the
issue had not been canvassed
in the pleadings, at the pre-trial
conference, nor did the appellants’ counsel lead the first
appellant on the issue. In
argument, counsel submitted that the issue
was not even dealt with in consultation as it was not an issue on the
pleadings, therefore
no admissible evidence was led to explain the
term ‘tax friendly’. Conversely, the respondent’s
counsel argued
that the issue had been raised on the pleadings. The
respondent’s counsel did not abandon reliance on this issue
before this
Court.
[22]
Although the full court
accepted that the inchoate issue had not been pleaded, the court
nevertheless dealt with the issue, because
the first appellant had
testified about it. However, the first appellant’s testimony in
answer to a question from the trial
court at the close of his
evidence-in-chief. Having accepted that the issue was not canvassed
in the pleadings, it was impermissible
for the full court to raise an
issue not in dispute and to pronounce on it in circumstances where
the issue had not been fully
canvassed at the trial.
[4]
In this matter, it caused prejudice to the appellants who were denied
the opportunity to place their version supported by admissible
evidence before the court. In
Fisher
v Ramahlele,
[5]
this Court held as follows:
‘
Turning
then to the nature of civil litigation in our adversarial system it
is for the parties, either in the pleadings or affidavits,
which
serve the function of both pleadings and evidence, to set out and
define the nature of their dispute and it is for the court
to
adjudicate upon those issues. That is so even where the dispute
involves an issue pertaining to basic human rights guaranteed
by our
Constitution, for ‘it is impermissible for a party to rely on a
constitutional complaint that was not pleaded. There
are cases where
the parties may expand those issues by the way in which they conduct
the proceedings. There may also be instances
where the court may
mero
motu
raise a question of law that emerges fully from the evidence and is
necessary for the decision of the case. That is subject to
the
proviso that no prejudice will be caused to any party by its being
decided. Beyond that it is for the parties to identify the
dispute
and for the court to determine that dispute and that dispute alone.
It
is not for the court to raise new issues not traversed in the
pleadings or affidavits, however interesting or important they
may
seem to it, and to insist that the parties deal with them. The
parties may have their own reasons for not raising those issues.
A
court may sometimes suggest a line of argument or an approach to a
case that has not previously occurred to the parties. However,
it is
then for the parties to determine whether they wish to adopt the new
point. They may choose not to do so because of its implications
for
the further conduct of the proceedings, such as an adjournment or the
need to amend pleadings or call additional evidence.
They may feel
that their case is sufficiently strong as it stands to require no
supplementation. They may simply wish the issues
already identified
to be determined because they are relevant to future matters and the
relationship between the parties. That
is for them to decide and not
the court. If they wish to stand by the issues they have formulated,
the court may not raise new
ones or compel them to deal with matters
other than those they have formulated in the pleadings or
affidavits.’ (Footnotes
omitted.)
[23]
The full court held that
since the onus was on the appellants to prove the agreement, the
first appellant’s testimony that
the agreement was incomplete
could be held against him. This Court, in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[6]
held that the interpretation of written instruments must follow the
triad of language, context and purpose. In this regard it held:
‘
. . . Whatever the nature
of the document, consideration must be given to the language used in
the light of the ordinary rules of
grammar and syntax; the context in
which the provision appears; the apparent purpose to which it is
directed and the material known
to those responsible for its
production. . . . Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the
temptation to substitute what they
regard as reasonable, sensible, or
business like for the words actually used . . .
All
this is consistent with the ‘emerging trend in statutory
construction’. It clearly adopts as a proper approach to
the
interpretation of documents the second of the two possible approaches
mentioned by Scheiner JA in
Jaga
v Dönges NO and another
,
namely that from the outset one considers the context and the
language together, with neither predominating over the other. This
is
the approach that courts in South Africa should now follow…’
[24]
To merely accept a litigant’s ‘say so’ on the
meaning of the words used
is impermissible. The full court ought to
have undertaken an interpretative analysis applying the triad. In any
event, the first
appellant was an unsatisfactory witness. He
complained about his poor memory and claimed that the events had
happened 14 years
earlier and that he had difficulty in remembering
what had happened ‘last week…never mind 14 years ago’.
Therefore,
the finding that D1 is inchoate stands to be set aside on
appeal.
### Was D1 abandoned?
Was D1 abandoned?
[25]
The appellants argued
that D1 was revived because D2, the novated contract, was unlawful
and unenforceable. The full court rejected
that argument on the basis
that the first appellant had testified that D2 had replaced D1.
Therefore, the full court concluded
that ‘that is an
abandonment of D1 and same cannot be resuscitated’. In
Acacia
Mines Ltd v Boshoff
[7]
(
Acacia
)
this Court held the following:
‘
The
question which to my mind must first be answered is whether the First
Prospecting Contract was abandoned or not. If it was abandoned,
then
the subsequent contract was an entirely new and self-contained
contract, and its validity in no way affects the position.
There is
no direct evidence of abandonment. . . It is therefore a matter of
inference whether there was an abandonment or not.’
[26]
The objective facts, from which the inference must be drawn, are that
the respondent had
defaulted on his obligations in terms of D1,
therefore, D2 came into being. In the latter agreement, the parties
attempted to make
the respondent’s obligations incurred in
terms of D1, manageable. This is obvious from the introductory
paragraph that confirms
that the respondent’s obligation in
terms of D1 was to pay R30 million and that he had been unable to
comply with that obligation,
as a result of which D2 had been entered
into. There is nothing in either contract to suggest that the parties
considered D1 to
have been an unlawful agreement as was the case in
Acacia
where the parties entered into the second contract
because their first prospecting contract was worthless. In
Acacia,
the money that was paid fell due in terms of the second contract. In
this matter, the money was paid in respect of both contracts
in
respect of the same obligation.
[27]
In
Acacia
, the court also found that the second agreement made
no mention of the first agreement, a factor that points to an
abandonment
of the first agreement. D2 makes introductory reference
to the D1. Finally, in
Acacia
the court said: ‘It is
also significant that in entering into the Second Prospecting
Contract the company commenced proceedings
de novo
and used
the same machinery as is ordinarily used for entering into new
contracts’. In this matter, the parties in D2 expressed
their
intention to renegotiate the R30 million obligation due in terms of
D1.
[28]
The objective facts indicate that the parties to D2 considered their
first agreement valid
and binding. Therefore, when the respondent
defaulted, they attempted to enter into another valid contract to
deal with the respondent’s
obligations incurred in terms of
their first agreement. I find myself in respectful disagreement with
the full court’s finding
that the intention of the parties was
to abandon D1 based on first appellant’s unreliable evidence.
The objective facts do
not support that finding.
### Does D1 fall foul of
section 8(4) of the NCA?
Does D1 fall foul of
section 8(4) of the NCA?
[29]
The full court found that the deferment of payment of R30 million in
D1 fell foul of the
provisions of section 8(4) of the NCA. The
section provides as follows:
‘
8.
Credit agreements…
(4)
An agreement, irrespective of its form but not including an agreement
contemplated in subsection (2), constitutes a credit transaction
if
it is –
(a)
a pawn transaction or discount transaction;
(b)
an incidental credit agreement, subject to section 5(2);
(c)
an instalment agreement;
(d)
a mortgage agreement or secure loan;
(e)
a lease; or
(f)
any other agreement, other than a credit facility or credit
guarantee, in terms of which payment of an amount owed by one person
to another is deferred, and any charge, fee or interest is payable to
the credit provider in respect of –
(i)
the agreement; or
(ii)
the amount that has been deferred.’
[30]
The contemporaneous correspondence between the parties indicates that
the agreement between
them was primarily about the sale of shares.
The respondent estimated that the shares would appreciate and made
optimistic predictions.
Their first agreement, D1, was drafted
pursuant to that estimation. The intention was always that the amount
should be paid in
monetary value. No ‘charge, fee or interest’
was payable by the respondent on the purchase price for the shares.
[31]
The first appellant, being an accountant, was anxious to have the
money paid into one of
the entities under his control to minimise any
adverse tax implications. That does not make the agreement inchoate,
nor does it
defer the payment. Instead, the first appellant’s
interest in the development company would appreciate as per the
respondent’s
optimistic predictions if he remained invested for
a further three years. The first appellant had invested R8 million in
the development
and only received R7 million in return. It follows
that D1 is not a credit agreement in terms of the NCA.
## Conclusion
Conclusion
[32]
The appellants’ concession that certain clauses in D2
contravened the provisions
of the NCA and that those provisions were
not severable from the rest of D2 was the basis on which the trial
was conducted. It
follows that the appellants could not obtain any
relief based on D2.
[33]
I am persuaded that the
real intention of the parties is ascertainable and that D1 is not a
simulated agreement.
[8]
The
first appellant wanted to opt out of the development, but the
respondent persuaded him that his shares would appreciate
considerably
in three years. The contracting parties’ true
intention is recorded in D1; the latter does not fall foul of section
8(4)
of the NCA. It follows that the first appellant is entitled to
relief based on the respondent’s breach of his obligations
in
terms of D1.
[34]
As indicated above, the pleadings are confusing. The appellants’
counsel made it
clear that the claim is not for R23 million; it
follows that this Court can only award the lesser amount. It bears
repeating that
the appellants’ conditional/alternative claim
was for the amount of R23 million in terms of D1, alternatively the
payments
of R5 million plus interest and costs. The appellants, as
they were entitled to, abandoned part of their claim for R23 million.
It follows that the alternate claim succeeds.
[35]
As a result, the following order is made:
(a)
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where so
employed.
(b)
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(i)
The defendant is ordered to pay the first plaintiff the amount of R 5
million plus
interest on the amount of R5 million at the rate of
15.5% from 1 March 2011 to date of payment.
(ii)
The defendant is ordered to pay the costs of the action including all
reserved costs
and the costs consequent upon the employment of two
counsel.’
________________________
E
D BAARTMAN
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellant: A B Rossouw SC (with him J H A Saunders)
Instructed
by: Jaco Roos Attorneys Inc., Pretoria
Noordmans
Inc., Bloemfontein
For
respondent: J D Maritz SC
Instructed
by:Savage Jooste & Adams Inc., Pretoria
Pretorius
& Vennote, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Ratlou
v Man Financial Services SA (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
ZASCA 49;
2019 (5) SA 117 (SCA).
[2]
Du
Bruyn N O and Others v Karsten
[2018]
ZASCA 143;
2019 (1) SA 403 (SCA).
[3]
Section
8 read with section 40(1).
[4]
Minister
of Safety & Security v Slabbert
[2009]
ZASCA
163;
[2010] 2 All SA 474
(SCA) para 11: ‘The purpose of the
pleadings is to define the issues for the other party and the court.
A party has
a duty to allege in the pleadings the material facts
upon which it relies. It is impermissible for a plaintiff to plead a
particular
case and seek to establish a different case at the trial.
It is equally not permissible for the trial court to have recourse
to issues falling outside the pleadings when deciding a case.’
[5]
Fisher
and Another v Ramahlele
and
Others
[2014]
ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA);
[2014] 3 All SA 395
(SCA) paras
13-14.
[6]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012]
2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) paras 18-19.
[7]
Acacia
Mines Ltd v Boshoff
1959
(4) SA 330
(A) at 336E-G.
[8]
M A Fouche, J V du Plessis and A J Kerr
The
Principles of Law of Contract
6
ed (2004).
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