Case Law[2023] ZASCA 43South Africa
Close-Up Mining (Pty) Ltd and Others v The Arbitrator, Judge Phillip Boruchowitz and Another (286/2022) [2023] ZASCA 43; 2023 (4) SA 38 (SCA) (31 March 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
31 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Arbitration – grounds of review – arbitrator enjoyed no discretionary competence to decide a dispute not contained in the pleadings – Arbitration Foundation of Southern Africa (AFSA) rules applicable – gross irregularity not shown.
Judgment
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## Close-Up Mining (Pty) Ltd and Others v The Arbitrator, Judge Phillip Boruchowitz and Another (286/2022) [2023] ZASCA 43; 2023 (4) SA 38 (SCA) (31 March 2023)
Close-Up Mining (Pty) Ltd and Others v The Arbitrator, Judge Phillip Boruchowitz and Another (286/2022) [2023] ZASCA 43; 2023 (4) SA 38 (SCA) (31 March 2023)
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sino date 31 March 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 286/2022
In the matter between:
CLOSE-UP
MINING (PTY) LTD FIRST
APPELLANT
WILLEM PIETER
TENNER SECOND
APPELLANT
CLOSE-UP MACHINERY AND
PLANT HIRE (PTY)
LTD THIRD
APPELLANT
and
THE ARBITRATOR,
JUDGE PHILLIP
BORUCHOWITZ FIRST
RESPONDENT
LUTZKIE GROUP OF
COMPANIES
(PTY)
LTD SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Close-Up Mining
(Pty) Ltd and Others v The Arbitrator, Judge
Phillip
Boruchowitz and Another
(286/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 43
(31 March 2023)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, MOCUMIE, MEYER and MATOJANE JJA and
UNTERHALTER AJA
Heard:
7 March 2023
Delivered:
31 March 2023
Summary:
Arbitration – grounds of review –
arbitrator enjoyed no discretionary competence to decide a dispute
not contained in
the pleadings – Arbitration Foundation of
Southern Africa (AFSA) rules applicable – gross irregularity
not shown.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Raulinga J, sitting as the court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel, where so employed.
2
The second respondent is ordered to pay the costs of volumes 4-12 of
the record.
JUDGMENT
Unterhalter AJA (Van
der Merwe, Mocumie, Meyer and Matojane JJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The second respondent, Lutzkie Group of
Companies (Pty) Ltd (the Lutzkie Group), brought arbitral proceedings
against the appellants,
Close-Up Mining (Pty) Ltd, Willem Pieter
Tenner and Close-Up Machinery and Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd, respectively
(collectively, Close-Up
Mining). The arbitrator, appointed by the
parties, was the first respondent, retired Judge Phillip Boruchowitz
(the Arbitrator).
The dispute submitted to arbitration concerned two
agreements, styled Binding Term Sheet 1 and 2. Having heard the
matter, the
Arbitrator made an award on 18 November 2020.
[2]
In the award, the Arbitrator declined to
consider a defence raised by Close-Up Mining to the effect that the
Lutzkie Group had repudiated
the agreements. The Arbitrator found
that the defence had not been pleaded, and hence fell outside his
jurisdiction. Close-Up Mining
considered the Arbitrator to have
fallen into error. Consequently, Close-Up Mining brought review
proceedings in the Gauteng Division
of the High Court, Pretoria (the
high court), seeking to set aside the Arbitrator’s award in
terms of s 33(1) of the Arbitration
Act 42 of 1965 (Arbitration Act).
[3]
Its challenge was initially widely cast. In
a supplementary founding affidavit, filed before the hearing in the
high court, the
grounds upon which Close-Up Mining sought to set
aside the award were considerably pruned. In essence, Close-Up Mining
contended
that the Arbitrator had excluded from consideration its
defence of repudiation on the basis that the defence had not been
pleaded.
The Arbitrator, said Close-Up Mining, had failed to
recognise that he enjoyed a discretion to entertain the defence, even
though
it was not pleaded. The Arbitrator thereby misconceived the
nature of the enquiry before him, and his associated duties, and thus
committed a gross irregularity in terms of
s 33(1)
(b)
of the
Arbitration Act. In
addition, Close-Up Mining complained that
the Arbitrator had ‘made’ Mr Tenner a party to Binding
Term Sheet 1, when
he was not a party to this agreement. By so doing,
claimed Close-Up Mining, the Arbitrator had exceeded his powers and
committed
a gross irregularity.
[4]
The review came before Raulinga J. The
Arbitrator abided the decision of the court. The high court found
that the disputes raised
in the arbitration proceedings are those
raised on the pleadings. And since the repudiation defence had not
been raised on the
pleadings, the Arbitrator had correctly decided
that he lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the defence. The review
was accordingly
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel. With the leave of the high court, Close-Up Mining appeals to
this Court.
Pleading and
jurisdiction ground of review
[5]
I turn, first, to the principal issue
raised in the appeal: is an arbitrator precluded from deciding a
defence that was not pleaded?
[6]
The Arbitrator considered this to be so,
and consequently determined that his competence was thus limited. The
dispute referred
to arbitration is framed by the pleadings. If a
defence is not pleaded, he reasoned, the Arbitrator does not enjoy
the competence
to decide that matter. This reasoning, Close-Up Mining
contended, is mistaken.
[7]
The matter before us proceeded on the basis
that the question to be determined is whether a party to arbitration
proceedings that
has failed to plead an issue may nevertheless seek
to have the arbitrator decide this issue. It was thus somewhat
unexpected that
counsel for Close-Up Mining commenced his oral
submissions with the contention that the pleadings in the arbitration
could be understood
to have raised the defence of repudiation. We do
not need to engage this interpretative exercise. Close-Up Mining
confined their
challenge to the grounds set out in their
supplementary founding affidavit. There, Close-Up Mining relied upon
the proposition
that the Arbitrator had come to the erroneous
conclusion that he lacked jurisdiction to decide a matter not
pleaded. That proposition
has as its starting premise that Close-Up
Mining did not plead the defence of repudiation. The contention that
the opposite is
true is at odds with the grounds upon which Close-Up
Mining formulated their case to set aside the award. We decline to
entertain
a new case on appeal addressed before us in oral argument.
[8]
Proceeding
then, on the basis that Close-Up Mining did not plead the Lutzkie
Group’s repudiation of the agreements, Close-Up
Mining did
however raise the question of repudiation in its heads of argument
before the Arbitrator. This, Close-Up Mining argued,
rendered the
principle in
Shill
v Milner
,
[1]
of application. There, the Appellate Division recognised that a court
enjoys a discretion to give some latitude to a litigant to
raise
issues at the trial that were not explicitly pleaded, where to do so
gives rise to no prejudice, and where all the facts
have been placed
before the trial court. Just as the
Shill
v Milner
discretion
is enjoyed by a trial court, so too, Close-Up Mining contended, an
arbitrator is invested with the same competence. The
Arbitrator
however failed to recognise this competence, and hence committed a
gross irregularity.
[9]
What then of the Arbitrator’s
holding, affirmed by the high court, that he enjoyed no jurisdiction
to decide matters that
were not pleaded? As an invariable statement
of the competence of an arbitrator, it is a proposition that cannot
stand.
[10]
It
is well understood that parties may agree the matters to be referred
to arbitration, and enjoy considerable autonomy in doing
so.
[2]
It is the arbitration agreement of the parties, taken together with
acceptance by the parties of the conditions on which the arbitrator
accepts appointment, that determine the jurisdiction of the
arbitrator as to the matters referred to arbitration.
[11]
Under
the principle of party autonomy, there is no reason why parties
cannot agree to confer upon an arbitrator the competence to
decide
matters that have not been pleaded, under a discretionary competence,
the content of which is akin to the discretion recognised
in
Shill
v Milner
.
It is important, however, to recognise the source of such a
competence in arbitration proceedings. It does not derive, as with
the courts, from an inherent power to protect and regulate their own
process.
[3]
It is to be found,
rather, in the arbitration agreement of the parties. If the parties
agree to confer upon the arbitrator a discretionary
competence to
decide a matter that has not been pleaded, but one that crystalises
outside of the pleadings, there is no reason
why the parties’
agreement should not be honoured.
[12]
It
follows that there is no rule of law that an arbitrator cannot enjoy
jurisdiction to decide matters not set out in the pleadings.
What
competence the arbitrator enjoys depends upon what is contained in
the arbitration agreement. This holding is an application
of the
principle of party autonomy. It is also consistent with the
Arbitration Act. An
arbitration agreement is defined in the
Arbitration Act to
mean a written agreement providing for the
reference to arbitration of any existing dispute or any future
dispute relating to a
matter specified in the agreement. That is
expansive language, and it would include a dispute that arises in the
course of arbitration
proceedings that the arbitrator is given a
discretion to entertain. The only two matters that the
Arbitration
Act specifically
excludes from a reference to arbitration are these:
any matrimonial cause or any matter relating to status.
[4]
Plainly, like any other agreement, a provision contrary to public
policy or the Constitution would also not be enforceable. But
there
is no suggestion that confining an arbitrator’s competence to
the matters pleaded is a requirement of the Constitution
or of public
policy. On the contrary, our courts have recognised the value that
attaches to party autonomy in the use of arbitration
to resolve
disputes.
[5]
[13]
The
holding in
Hos+Med
[6]
is entirely consistent with the position that I have taken. In
Hos+Med
,
this Court affirmed that the only source of an arbitrator’s
power is the arbitration agreement. The assumption by the appeal
tribunal, in that case, of a power to decide a matter outside of the
pleadings, on the strength of
Shill
v Milner
,
was held by this Court to be incompetent because the submission to
arbitration expressly limited the issues to the matters pleaded.
Significantly, this holding says nothing as to whether parties can
agree to submit issues to arbitration that are not pleaded.
Hos+Med
simply found that the parties did not do so.
[14]
I
am fortified in my opinion by the unreported decision of this Court
in
Holford.
[7]
There, the arbitration agreement accorded the arbitrator ‘such
powers as are allowed by law to a High Court of the Republic
of South
Africa to ensure the just, expeditious, economical and final
determination of the dispute’. This Court found that
since a
court would have been entitled to apply the principles set out in
Shill
v Milner
,
the arbitrator was likewise entitled to do so.
[15]
In sum, the competence of an arbitrator to
decide matters is determined by the arbitration agreement. The
arbitration agreement
may confine the submission to the issues that
have been pleaded. But there is no rule of law that requires the
parties to confine
their agreement in this way. The arbitration
agreement can therefore confer a competence upon an arbitrator to
decide matters upon
an exercise of a discretion of the kind
recognised in
Shill v Milner
.
All depends upon what the parties have agreed, and the proper
interpretation of their agreement.
[16]
I turn next to this question: did the
arbitration agreement concluded between the parties in fact confer a
discretionary competence
upon the Arbitrator to entertain the defence
of repudiation, raised by Close-Up Mining in its heads of argument?
[17]
Close-Up Mining contended that the
arbitration agreement did so. The Lutzkie Group resisted this
contention.
[18]
I should clarify that we are here concerned
to determine what competence the Arbitrator in fact enjoyed in terms
of the arbitration
agreement. We are not called upon to decide how
the Arbitrator should have exercised such competence, if he had it to
exercise.
[19]
The arbitration agreement is terse. It
reads as follows:
‘
Save
to the extent to the contrary provided for in this Term Sheet, any
dispute arising out of or in connection with this Term Sheet
shall be
decided by arbitration to be held in Sandton and shall be dealt with
by AFSA (the Arbitration Foundation of South Africa).’
[20]
The following interpretation of the
arbitration agreement was common ground between the parties. We
should understand the reference
in the arbitration agreement to the
Arbitration Foundation of South Africa (AFSA) to be a reference to
the AFSA commercial rules
for domestic arbitration applicable at the
time (the AFSA rules).
[21]
Close-Up Mining relied upon article 11.1 of
the AFSA rules. That rule reads as follows:
‘
The
arbitrator shall have the widest discretion and powers allowed by law
to ensure the just, expeditious, economical, and final
determination
of all the disputes raised in the proceedings, including the matter
of costs.’
[22]
Counsel for Close-Up Mining emphasised
three features of article 11.1. First, it conferred the widest
discretion and powers allowed
by law. That would include the kind of
discretion recognised in
Shill v Miller
.
Second, article 11.1 references the disputes raised in the
proceedings. It does not refer to disputes raised in the pleadings.
And the proceedings must connote the arbitration proceedings.
Disputes raised in evidence or argument are disputes raised in the
proceedings. Third, the provisions of article 11.2 that set out
specific powers do not detract from the amplitude of the general
power conferred in article 11.1. This is precisely what article 11.2
says. It reads as follows: ‘[w]ithout detracting from
the
generality of the aforegoing [ie article 11.1], the arbitrator shall
have the following powers: . . .’. Article 11.2’s
tabulation of specific powers, including powers concerning pleadings,
does not diminish the scope of the power conferred in article
11.1.
[23]
Close-Up
Mining argued that the wide terms in which the power conferred by
article 11.1 is cast must include a discretionary competence
of the
kind recognised in
Shill
v Milner
.
Whether this is so, requires us to interpret the arbitration
agreement. The arbitration agreement, the parties have agreed, must
be taken to include the AFSA rules. Like any agreement, we interpret
the agreement, and hence the AFSA rules, according to the
now well
understood triad of text, context, and purpose.
[8]
[24]
True enough, article 11.1 is widely cast.
It confers ‘the widest discretion and powers allowed by law’
for a particular
purpose. That is, ‘
to
ensure the just, expeditious, economical, and final determination of
all the disputes raised in the proceedings, including the
question of
costs
’. However, if a dispute is
not raised in the proceedings, then the powers conferred upon the
arbitrator cannot be of application,
no matter their breadth, because
the power is conferred to determine a dispute raised in the
proceedings.
[25]
Thus, for the arbitrator to exercise the
wide discretion and powers conferred by article 11.1, a dispute must
have been raised in
the proceedings. The question is then this: when
can it be said that a dispute has been raised in the proceedings? A
dispute is
raised in the proceedings, under the AFSA rules, by
following these rules. A party must make a written request for
arbitration.
The request must,
inter
alia
, set out a statement that an
award, in accordance with the claims, would fall within the terms of
the arbitration agreement (article
4.2.3); a statement setting out
the
locus standi
of each party, the nature of the dispute, all the material facts, the
contentions relied upon by the claimant and the relief claimed
(article 4.2.4). Provision is then made for the response of the
defendant. That response includes a statement as to whether the
defendant disputes the arbitration agreement and that it is still
operative (article 6.1.4); whether the defendant disputes that
the
claim falls within the terms of the arbitration agreement (article
6.1.4); and, if not, by delivering a statement of defence,
setting
out the material facts and contentions relied upon by the defendant,
indicating which of the claimant’s facts and
contentions are
disputed, and what relief is claimed (article 6.1.5.1). The defendant
may deliver a counter-claim (article 6.1.5.2),
and the claimant, a
statement of defence to the counter-claim (article 6.4).
[26]
Once a dispute has been raised on the
pleadings, the arbitrator is invested with further powers granted
under article 11 in respect
of the pleadings. Those powers include
the competence to permit of the amendment of any pleading (article
11.2.13); the competence
to make any ruling or give any direction he
considers necessary or advisable for the just, expeditious,
economical and final determination
of all the disputes raised in the
pleadings (article 11.2.5); and an arbitrator may also require a
party to amend its pleadings
so that they are not evasive, and to
strike out averments in pleadings that are embarrassingly vague,
scandalous, vexatious or
irrelevant (article 11.2.22).
[27]
The AFSA rules define the term ‘pleading’
as follows. A pleading ‘includes documents comprising a Request
for
Arbitration, a statement of defence, a counter-claim and a
statement of defence to a counterclaim’. The pleadings thus
form
steps in the proceedings by recourse to which disputes are
raised. The pleadings, however, do not exhaust the ways in which
disputes
may be raised in the proceedings.
[28]
Article 11.2 provides examples of other
types of disputes that may be raised in the proceedings in respect of
which the arbitrator
enjoys powers. The arbitrator may decide
disputes as to the admissibility of evidence, any matter of onus, the
production or preservation
of property, the joinder of parties in the
arbitration proceedings, and the furnishing of security for costs.
[29]
It follows that under the AFSA rules,
disputes may be raised in the proceedings, outside of the pleadings,
that the arbitrator is
empowered to decide. The pleadings form part
of the proceedings, but the proceedings are wider than the pleadings.
[30]
If that is so, then should we not conclude
that the arbitrator has a discretionary power to permit a dispute
raised outside of the
pleadings to be treated as a dispute raised in
the proceedings? Three reasons incline against that conclusion.
[31]
The first is conceptual. One cannot confuse
the power of the arbitrator with the subject matter over which the
arbitrator exercises
this power. Article 11.1 is a general
description of the arbitrator’s powers. Over what subject
matter are those powers exercised?
As I have said, the answer is the
disputes raised in the proceedings in terms of the AFSA rules.
Article 11.1 does not allow the
arbitrator the
discretionary
power to decide that a dispute has been raised in the proceedings. It
is for the parties to raise the dispute in terms of the AFSA
rules.
If they do so, the power conferred upon the arbitrator is to decide
this dispute.
[32]
Second, the AFSA rules set out a detailed
procedure by which the parties raise disputes by way of pleadings. As
I have recognised,
the pleadings are not the only way in which the
parties may raise disputes in the proceedings. But a reading of the
AFSA rules,
taken as a whole, reflects that the exchange of pleadings
is the procedure that is to be followed by the parties to define
their
primary substantive disputes. Why else specify in such detail
what the request for arbitration and the statement of defence must
contain, and the permission that must be sought of the arbitrator to
amend the pleadings. There are then disputes that the AFSA
rules
permit the parties to raise as a consequence of the primary disputes
that have been pleaded. Discovery, joinder, separation
of issues: to
identify a few examples. These disputes also require resolution. They
may be raised by the parties in the course
of the arbitration
proceedings. But, these disputes arise from, and are parasitic upon,
the primary pleaded disputes. I shall call
these ‘dependent
disputes’.
[33]
Dependent disputes may be raised by the
parties in the proceedings, but their hallmark is to facilitate the
determination of the
primary disputes. The dependent disputes do not
constitute the decision by the arbitrator of the primary disputes
that have been
pleaded. The AFSA rules therefore do not contemplate
that a party to the arbitration may raise a substantive dispute
outside of
the pleadings, and that such dispute may be adjudicated by
the arbitrator if he decides, on a discretionary basis, to do so.
That
would subvert a central feature of the AFSA rules.
[34]
The AFSA rules require the parties to raise
their substantive disputes in the pleadings. If the pleadings fail to
reflect the dispute
adequately, then an amendment of the pleadings
must be sought, and it is for the arbitrator to decide whether to
permit the amendment.
These rules are antithetical to the
discretionary
Shill v Milner
power
that Close-Up Mining would attribute to the Arbitrator.
[35]
Third, the discretionary power for which
Close-Up Mining contends is an incident of the inherent power of the
courts. While the
principle of party autonomy permits parties to
include such a discretionary power in their arbitration agreement (as
I have found),
it is an unusual provision to find in an arbitration
agreement. Courts enjoy inherent power because they have a
constitutional
duty to secure justice. That extends beyond the
interests of litigants. Arbitrators have no such power. It is the
parties’
agreement that determines what dispute must be decided
and the powers conferred upon an arbitrator to do so. What makes the
discretionary
power of the type recognised in
Shill
v Milner
unusual in an arbitration
agreement is that it rests upon a paradox of party autonomy. The
parties would confer the discretionary
power contended for by
Close-Up Mining to permit the arbitrator to extend the reach of his
own jurisdiction, something that is
ordinarily for the parties to
determine. The parties may do so, but an arbitration agreement should
ordinarily make it plain that
that is what the parties intended. The
AFSA rules do no such thing. Their cumulative provisions point to the
opposite conclusion
– that no such discretionary power was
conferred upon the Arbitrator.
[36]
For these reasons, I find that the AFSA
rules do not confer a discretionary power upon the Arbitrator to
decide whether to adjudicate
the defence of repudiation. If the AFSA
rules recognise no such power, then it is common ground that the
arbitration agreement
does not do so. Consequently, the Arbitrator
made no error when he declined to entertain the defence of
repudiation. And hence,
Close-Up Mining has failed to establish that
the Arbitrator committed a gross irregularity. The appeal on this
ground must consequently
fail.
The parties to the
transaction ground of review
[37]
The second ground of appeal relied upon by
Close-Up Mining is this. The Lutzkie Group averred in their statement
of claim that Mr
Tenner was a party to Transaction 1 of Term Sheet 1.
Counsel for the Lutzkie Group had, in his opening address in the
arbitration,
made it plain that the purchase price in respect of
Transaction 1 was payable by the Lutzkie Group to Close-Up Mining.
This, it
was contended, was a recognition by the Lutzkie Group that
Mr Tenner was not a party to Transaction 1. Yet, the Arbitrator, in
his award, having identified the
merx
of
the sale to include Mr Tenner’s shares in Close-Up Mining, made
Mr Tenner a party to the transaction, when he was not,
as counsel for
the Lutzkie Group had acknowledged. By so doing, the Arbitrator,
Close-Up Mining contended, exceeded his powers
and committed a gross
irregularity.
[38]
The opening address of counsel for the
Lutzkie Group amounted to no withdrawal of the claim, so as to alter
the dispute the Arbitrator
was required to decide. That dispute
included a claim by the Lutzkie Group for the following relief: that
Mr Tenner be directed
to do all such things and sign all such
documents as may be necessary to effect transfer of his shares in
Close-Up Mining, and
of his right, interest, benefits and claims of
whatsoever nature. That relief was pursued by the Lutzkie Group in
the arbitration
proceedings by seeking the specific performance of
Transaction 1. The Arbitrator was required to decide upon the relief
sought.
He did so, and granted the relief. That Close-Up Mining
considers the Arbitrator to have been in error, because Mr Tenner was
not
a party to Transaction 1, is of no account. The Arbitrator
decided a live dispute concerning the remedy of specific performance.
By so doing, he committed no gross irregularity.
[39]
Accordingly, this second ground of appeal
must also fail.
Costs
[40]
Close-Up Mining has not prevailed in the
appeal. They must therefore bear the costs of that outcome, including
the costs of two
counsel, where so employed. That conclusion is
subject to one rider. The Lutzkie Group insisted that the record must
include the
transcript of the arbitration proceedings. This was no
small inclusion, amounting to nine volumes (some 1 500 pages). That
insistence
was entirely unwarranted. The first three volumes of the
record were all that was required to ventilate and decide the appeal.
[41]
Where
records contain unnecessary documentation or have not been properly
prepared in other respects, this Court has limited the
costs of
preparation, perusal and copying that those responsible for preparing
the record would have otherwise been entitled to
claim.
[9]
This is particularly so where the record is voluminous. There is no
reason why this principle should not be extended to require
that a
party responsible for the unnecessary inclusion of documents in the
record should be rendered liable for the costs occasioned
thereby.
Accordingly, the costs occasioned by the inclusion of the record of
the arbitration proceedings must be borne by the Lutzkie
Group.
[42]
In
the result, the appeal fails, and the following order is made:
1
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel,
where so employed.
2
The
second respondent is ordered to pay the costs of volumes 4-12 of the
record.
__________________________
D N UNTERHALTER
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
B
H Swart SC
Instructed
by:
Alice
Swanepoel Attorneys, Pretoria
Symington
De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
J
J Brett SC
Instructed
by:
Gothe
Attorneys, Pretoria
McIntyre
Van der Post, Bloemfontein
[1]
Shill
v Milner
1937
AD 101
(A) at 105.
[2]
Lufuno
Mphaphuli and Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
[2009]
ZACC 6
;
2009 (6) BCLR 527
(CC);
2009
(4) SA 529
(CC) para 219;
Telcordia
Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd
[2006]
ZASCA 112
;
2007 (3) SA 266
(SCA);
[2007] 2 All SA 243
(SCA);
2007
(5) BCLR 503
(SCA)
para
4.
[3]
Section
173 of the Constitution.
[4]
Section
2
of the
Arbitration Act.
[5
]
See
Telcordia
Technologies Inc
para 4 as well as authorities cited therein.
[6]
Hos+Med
Medical Aid Scheme v Thebe Ya Bophelo Healthcare Marketing and
Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2007]
ZASCA 163
;
[2008] 2 All SA 132
(SCA);
2008
(2) SA 608
(SCA) paras 30-31.
[7]
Holford
v Carleo Enterprises (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 195
(SCA) para 9.
[8]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021] ZASCA 99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA);
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA)
para 25.
[9]
Siyangena
Technologies (Pty) Ltd v PRASA and Others
[2022] ZASCA 149
;
[2023] 1 All SA 74
(SCA);
2023 (2) SA 51
(SCA)
para 50 and case cited therein.
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