Case Law[2022] ZASCA 47South Africa
Johannes G Coetzee & Seun and Another v Le Roux and Another (969/2020) [2022] ZASCA 47 (8 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
8 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Prescription – extinctive prescription – ‘facts from which the debt arises’ in terms of s 12(3) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 – knowledge of legal consequences not required by s 12(3) of the Prescription Act – Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981 – failure to comply with s 2(1) of the Alienation of Land Act.
Judgment
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## Johannes G Coetzee & Seun and Another v Le Roux and Another (969/2020) [2022] ZASCA 47 (8 April 2022)
Johannes G Coetzee & Seun and Another v Le Roux and Another (969/2020) [2022] ZASCA 47 (8 April 2022)
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sino date 8 April 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF
SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 969/2020
In
the matter between:
JOHANNES
G COETZEE &
SEUN
FIRST APPELLANT
DANIEL
CORNELIUS COETZEE
SECOND APPELLANT
and
PIETER
PAUL LE
ROUX
FIRST RESPONDENT
JOHANNA
CATHARINA LE ROUX
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Johannes
G Coetzee & Seun and Another v Le Roux and Another
(969/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 47
(8 April 2022)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, SCHIPPERS, DLODLO, CARELSE and HUGHES JJA
Heard:
22 February 2022
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by email. It has
been published
on the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 8
April 2022.
Summary:
Prescription –
extinctive
prescription – ‘facts from which the debt arises’ in terms of
s
12(3)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
– knowledge of legal
consequences not required by
s 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act
–
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
– failure to comply with
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act.
ORDER
On appeal from:
Northern Cape Division of the High Court, Kimberley (W J
Coetzee AJ, sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld
with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and substituted with the
following:
‘
The special plea of
prescription is upheld with costs and the plaintiffs’ action is
dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Mocumie JA
(Schippers,
Dlodlo, Carelse and Hughes JJA)
[1]
This appeal is about extinctive prescription, in particular
whether
the creditor must be aware of the full extent of its rights before
prescription may start running against it.
[2]
The first and second respondents, Mr Pieter Paul le Roux and
his
wife,
Ms
Johanna Catharina le Roux, who
were the plaintiffs in the Northern Cape Division of the High Court,
Kimberley (the high court), instituted
action against the first and
second appellants, Johannes G Coetzee & Seun and Mr Daniel
Cornelius Coetzee, who were the defendants
therein, and which were
the respondents’ erstwhile attorneys. The respondents sued the
appellants for damages suffered as a result
of a breach of a mandate.
For convenience, hereafter the parties will be referred to as they
were in the high court.
[3]
The plaintiffs alleged that the defendants were negligent in
carrying
out their mandate to exercise an option to purchase a farm in
Calvinia, in the Northern Cape (the property), from the late
Mr Jan
Harmse Steyn (the deceased), who had concluded the option to purchase
(the option) with the plaintiffs. Notwithstanding the
existence of
the option and unknown to the plaintiffs, on 8 July 2003, the
deceased and his wife concluded a written deed of sale
with Mr Paul
Nel (Mr Nel) in terms of which the deceased sold the property to Mr
Nel at a purchase price of R141 000. On 13
September 2003, the
deceased passed away. On 16 September 2003, the property was
transferred to Mr Nel.
[4]
On 14 October 2004, in an attempt
to enforce the option, the plaintiffs issued summons against Mr Nel,
as the first defendant therein,
and Mr Alwyn Johannes Müller NO, the
attorney of the deceased’s estate, as the second defendant therein,
claiming transfer of
the property and damages. Mr Nel pleaded to the
summons admitting receipt of the second plaintiff’s letter
purporting to exercise
the option, but disputing the validity
thereof. On 11 September 2009, Williams J (Northern Cape high court)
dismissed the action
with costs on the basis that the option was not
executed in terms of the provisions of
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation of
Land Act 68 of 1981
. The plaintiffs unsuccessfully appealed against
the judgment of Williams J in this Court.
[1]
Subsequently, on 29 September
2009, the plaintiffs issued summons against the defendants in the
high court in respect of the matter
which forms the subject of this
appeal. In this action, the defendants delivered a special plea in
terms of which they pleaded that
the plaintiffs’ claim had
prescribed. Thereafter, the parties agreed to submit a special case
on prescription for adjudication,
first, in terms of
rule 33(4).
[2]
[5]
Before the high court, in their special plea of prescription,
the
defendants alleged that the plaintiffs’ claim had prescribed for
the following reasons: more than three years had elapsed since
the
debt became due before summons was served; that the content of Mr
Nel’s plea (para 4) in respect of the action before Williams
J
should have alerted the plaintiffs to the nature of the defendants’
breach and the fact that the option was not exercised in
terms of the
provisions of
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act; and
that had
their new attorneys, NME Nilssen & Associates, conducted
themselves in the manner expected of reasonable attorneys,
they would
have become aware of the plaintiffs’ claim against the defendants.
[6]
In their replication, the plaintiffs alleged that they acquired
knowledge of the identity of the debtor and the facts from which the
debt arose only in early November 2007, during the cross-examination
of the first plaintiff in the action against Mr Nel; alternatively,
on 11 September 2009, when the judgment of Williams J was handed
down. Accordingly, they alleged that prescription began to run only
in early November 2007, or on 11 September 2009, and that the
summons
served in October 2009 interrupted prescription.
[7]
The high court (Coetzee AJ) found
that the alleged ‘debt’ arose from a breach of an implied term of
a mandatory contract;
[3]
and that from the evidence of the
first plaintiff, it was clear that the first plaintiff only came to
know of the provisions of
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act during
the trial in the action instituted by the plaintiffs against Mr Nel,
being in early November 2007. Furthermore, the high court held
[4]
that the non-compliance with the
provisions of
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act is
a fact of which
the defendants had to have had knowledge, and not a legal conclusion.
Therefore, the high court concluded that ‘[s]ave
for relying on the
submission that the plaintiffs should have been alerted to the breach
by the contents of Nel’s plea, [of 23
December 2004], the
defendant[s], bearing the onus, did not place anything before
[Coetzee AJ] which justifies a conclusion that
the plaintiffs did not
act as expected of a reasonable [person]’. Notably, the high court
considered the recent judgment of this
Court,
Fluxmans
Incorporated v Levenson
,
[5]
and held that it is
distinguishable on the facts. It thus dismissed, with costs, the
defendants’ special plea of prescription.
[8]
Before this Court, the parties agreed to have their appeal resolved
on the basis of a statement of agreed facts, as the original record
was missing. The statement reads:
‘
33.
The Appellants contend that prescription in respect of the
Respondents’ claim against them began
to run as soon [as] the
Option expired on 12 November 2003 when they lost their entitlement
to acquire the Property at the purchase
price stipulated in the
Option, alternatively, within a reasonable time, being one month, of
the appointment of Nilssens Attorneys
as the Respondents’
attorneys. The Appellants contend that because the Respondents knew
that Mr Coetzee purported to exercise the
Option on their behalf and
knew that he did not have their written authority to do so,
prescription commenced to run from the very
moment that the Option
lapsed, alternatively, on 23 July 2005 being one month after the
appointment of Attorneys Nilssens as the
Respondents' attorneys.
34.
The Appellants contend that the Respondents’ knowledge that Mr
Coetzee purported to exercise
the Option on their behalf and that he
did so without their written authority constituted knowledge of the
facts from which the debt
arose as contemplated in section 12(3) of
the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 ("the Prescription Act”) and
that the commencement
of the running of prescription was not delayed
by the provisions of section 12(3). In other words, the Appellants
contend that the
Respondents’ lack of knowledge and/or appreciation
that Mr Coetzee's lack of authority amounted to a failure to comply
with section
2(1) of the Alienation Act and their Iack of knowledge
and/or appreciation that such failure to comply with section 2(1) of
the Alienation
Act had the consequence that Mr Coetzee’s purported
exercise of the Option on the Respondents' behalf was ineffectual,
were not
facts contemplated by
section 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act
and
that the running of prescription would not be delayed until the
Respondents became aware of them. They were the legal consequences
of
the facts which were within the knowledge of the Respondents and were
not required to be known by the Respondents before the running
of
prescription could commence.
35.
The Appellants’ alternative contention is that, even if it is found
that the Respondents'
lack of knowledge and/or appreciation that Mr
Coetzee's lack of authority amounted to a failure to comply with
section 2(1) of the
Alienation Act and that it had the consequence
that his purported exercise of the Option was invalid, the
Respondents could have
acquired knowledge thereof by exercising
reasonable care on 22 June 2005 when Nilssens Attorneys were
appointed as their attorneys,
or within a reasonable period thereof,
and would be deemed to have such knowledge by virtue of the proviso
to section 12(3) of the
Prescription Act.’
[9]
To the contrary, the plaintiffs contend that:
‘
36.
[T]hey only became aware that Mr Coetzee had breached his mandate
when the consequences of his failure
to comply with the requirements
of section 2(1) of the Alienation Act, and of the fact that Mr
Coetzee's attempted exercise of the
Option on their behalf was
invalid, were for the first time drawn to the attention of the First
Respondent during his cross examination
early in November 2007. The
Respondents furthermore contend that the failure to comply with
section 2(1) and the resulting invalidity
of the exercise of the
Option are
facts
of
which the Respondents were required to be aware in order for the
running of prescription to commence in terms of
section 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act. The
Respondents therefore contend that prescription
did not commence to run against them until November 2007.
37.
The alternative contention is disputed on the basis that [the]
Appellants seek to impute to
the Respondents the knowledge and
conduct of their agent (Nilssens Attorneys) for the purpose of the
enquiry in terms of
section 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act. The
Respondents contend that this is not permissible. Additionally, the
Appellants have failed to establish a factual foundation for
their
alternative contention.’
[10]
This appeal, therefore, calls for an examination of
s 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
, which provides:
‘
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsections (2), (3), and (4),
prescription shall commence to
run as soon as the debt is due.
(2)
If the debtor wilfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of
the existence of
the debt, prescription shall not commence to run
until the creditor becomes aware of the existence of the debt.
(3)
A debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge
of the identity
of the debtor and of the facts from which the debt
arises: Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such
knowledge if he
could have acquired it by exercising reasonable care.
(4)
. . .’
[11]
The words
‘debt’ and ‘the debt is due’ are not defined in the
Prescription Act. Neither
are the words ‘knowledge of . . . the
facts from which the debt arises’. All of these terms, however,
have been given meaning
and defined in context by this Court and the
Constitutional Court, and are followed by courts in general.
In
Mtokonya v Minister of
Police
,
[6]
Zondo J states the following at
para 36:
‘
Section
12(3)
does not require the creditor to have knowledge of any right to
sue the debtor nor does it require him or her to have knowledge of
legal conclusions that may be drawn from “the facts from which the
debt arises”. Case law is to the effect that the facts from
which
the debt arises are the facts which a creditor would need to prove in
order to establish the liability of the debtor.’
[7]
[12]
In
Minister
of Finance and Others v
Gore
NO
,
[8]
this
Court said:
‘
This
Court has in a series of decisions emphasised that time begins to run
against the creditor when it has the
minimum
facts that are necessary to institute action
.
The running of prescription is not postponed until a creditor becomes
aware of the full extent of its legal rights . . . .’
[9]
(My
emphasis.)
[13]
In
Yellow
Star Properties
1020
(Pty) Ltd v MEC: Department of Development Planning and Local
Government, Gauteng
,
[10]
this Court,
inter
alia
, said: ‘It may
be that the applicant had not appreciated the legal consequences
which flowed from the facts, but its failure to
do so does not delay
the date prescription commenced to run’.
[11]
[14]
In
Claasen
v
Bester
,
[12]
this Court had to consider the
same issue. It referred to its previous decisions in
Truter
and Another
v Deysel
[13]
and
Gore
,
[14]
and said that these cases:
‘
[Made]
it abundantly clear that knowledge of legal conclusions is not
required before prescription begins to run. . .. The principles
laid
down have been applied in several cases in this court, including most
recently
Yellow
Star Properties 1020 (Pty) Ltd v MEC, Department of Development
Planning and Local Government, Gauteng
[2009]
3 All SA 475
[2009 (3) SA 577
(SCA)] para 37 where Leach AJA said
that if the applicant “had not appreciated the legal consequences
which flowed from the facts”
its failure to do so did not delay the
running of prescription.’
[15]
[15]
In
Fluxmans
,
[16]
this Court confirmed that
s 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act does
not require knowledge of legal
conclusions on the part of a creditor before a debt can be said to be
due. Both the majority and the
minority judgments were agreed on
this: that an agreement being invalid is not a fact, but a legal
conclusion.
[17]
That seems to be the same as to
say that conduct that is wrongful and actionable is a legal
conclusion and not a fact.
[16]
Recently, in
MEC
for Health, Western Cape v M C
,
[18]
this Court stated:
‘
Prescription
begins
to
run
when
the
debt
in
question
is
due,
that
is,
when
it
is owing and payable. . . .
.
. . [O]nly the requirement of knowledge of “the facts from which
the debt arises” needs to be considered. These are the minimum
essential facts that the plaintiff must prove in order to succeed
with the claim. See
Truter and Another v Deysel
[2006] ZASCA
16
;
2006 (4) SA 168
(SCA) paras 16, 18, 19 and 22;
Minister of
Finance and Others v Gore NO
[2006] ZASCA 98
;
[2007] 1 All SA 309
(SCA);
2007 (1) SA 111
(SCA) para 17 and the footnotes thereto;
Mtokonya v Minister of Police
[2017] ZACC 33
;
2017 (11) BCLR
1443
(CC);
2018 (5) SA 22
(CC) para 48. Legal conclusions, such as
the invalidity of a contract or that the delictual elements of
negligence or wrongfulness
have been established, are not facts.
Neither is the evidence necessary to prove the essential facts. See
Truter v Deysel
paras 17 and 20 and
Mtokonya
paras
44-45 and 50-51.’
[17]
More recently, in
McMillan
v Bate
Chubb & Dickson Incorporated
,
[19]
this Court held:
‘
The
period of prescription begins to run against a creditor when the
creditor has the minimum facts which are necessary to institute
action. As this Court recently held in
Fluxmans
Incorporated v Levenson
:
“
Knowledge
that the relevant agreement did not comply with the provisions of the
Act is not a fact which the respondent needed to acquire
to complete
a cause of action and was therefore not relevant to the running of
prescription. This Court stated in
Gore
NO
para
17 that the period of prescription begins to run against the creditor
when it has minimum facts that are necessary to institute
action. The
running of prescription is not postponed until it becomes aware of
the full extent of its rights nor until it has evidence
that would
prove a case ‘comfortably’. The ‘fact’ on which the
respondent relies for the contention that the period of prescription
began to run in February 2014, is knowledge about the legal status of
the agreement, which is irrelevant to the commencement of
prescription.
It may be that before February 2014 the respondent did
not appreciate the legal consequences which flowed from the facts,
but his
failure to do so did not delay the date on which the
prescription began to run. Knowledge of invalidity of the contingency
fee agreement
or knowledge of its non-compliance with the provision
of the Act is one and the same thing otherwise stated or expressed
differently.
That the contingency fees agreements such as the present
one, which do not comply with the Act, are invalid is a legal
position that
obtained since the decision of this court in
Price
Waterhouse Coopers Inc
and
is therefore not a fact which the respondent had to establish in
order to complete his cause of action.
Section
12(3)
of the
Prescription Act requires
knowledge only of the material
facts from which the prescriptive period begins to run – it does
not require knowledge of the legal
conclusion (that the known facts
constitute invalidity)
(
Claasen
v Bester
[2011]
ZASCA 197
;
2012 (2) SA 404
(SCA)).”.’ (Original emphasis.)
Most
recently, similar views were expressed in
Van
Heerden & Brummer Inc v Bath
.
[20]
[18]
In an application where a special
plea of prescription is raised, there are two enquiries that must
take place, as set out in
MEC
for Health, Western Cape.
[21]
First, the determination of the
primary facts, on one hand, and on the other hand, the knowledge or
deemed knowledge thereof. This
means that once the facts from which
the debt arose (the primary facts) have been determined, the enquiry
turns to the creditor’s
knowledge of the primary facts. It is
important to be cognisant of some overlap of facts between these two
distinct enquires postulated
in
s 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act.
[22
]
[19]
The case for the plaintiffs on the stated facts is that they only
became aware of ‘the
facts from which the debt arises’ when their
attention was for the first time drawn to those facts during the
cross-examination
of the first plaintiff early in November 2007.
Thus, prescription did not commence to run against them until
November 2007. However,
in the particulars of claim it is stated that
the plaintiffs’ consulted the second defendant on 26 September
2003, after the deceased
had passed away on 13 September 2003, to
exercise the option on their behalf. And the second defendant had
told them he would write
to Mr Müller. This is later confirmed in
the statements of agreed facts, at paras 9-10 where it is stated that
‘on or about 26
September 2003, the [plaintiffs] . . . mandated [Mr
Coetzee] . . . to exercise the Option on their behalf. . . . and [Mr
Coetzee]
said that he would send a letter to [the attorney, Mr
Muller]’. Furthermore, that before the plaintiffs left the second
defendant’s
office, Mrs le Roux had asked him whether it was
necessary to sign anything, to which the second defendant responded
that it was
not. These are the primary facts within their specific
knowledge.
[20]
To my mind, on the common cause facts gathered from the statement of
agreed facts,
the pleaded case as reflected in the particulars of
claim and the founding affidavit, the plaintiffs had the required
knowledge of
the facts on or about 26 September 2003. This was when
the plaintiffs mandated the second defendant to exercise the option
on their
behalf and he told them that he would send a letter to the
attorney, Mr Müller, and they did not sign anything. Apart from
this,
they became aware of the essential facts when they suffered
damages when the option lapsed on 13 November 2003. Their cause of
action
against the defendants was thus complete on the latter date.
Alternatively, the latest, objectively, that they should reasonably
have had the requisite knowledge was when they terminated their
mandate with the second defendant and instructed Mr Nilssen, their
new attorney, in January 2005. This qualifies as deemed knowledge
within the contemplation of
s 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act. That
the
plaintiffs were unaware of the provisions of
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation
of Land Act until
early November 2017, cannot be a fact from which
their claim arose. But instead, it is a legal conclusion. On this
basis, applying
the principle extrapolated from the above precedents,
the contention that the plaintiffs only became aware
of
the facts from which the debt arose
during the
cross-examination in early November 2007 cannot be correct.
[21]
In conclusion, on these facts, it is clear that the plaintiffs had
the minimum facts
from which they needed to institute their claim on
26 September 2003, or when the option expired on 13 November 2003.
But even after
that date, at the latest, by January 2005. It was not
required of them to know more about the
Alienation of Land Act and
compliance with it. Only that they had mandated the defendants to act
on their behalf, and they did not do so. This means that the
plaintiffs’ claim prescribed before summons was served on 26
September 2009.
[22]
The plaintiffs’ remaining
contention that prescription began to run on 13 September 2009 when
the judgment by Williams J was handed
down, can be dealt with
briefly. The
dictum
by Moseneke J in
Eskom
v Bojanala
Platinum District Municipality
,
[23]
applied most recently in
Van
Heerden & Brummer Inc
,
[24]
provides a
complete answer, where it is stated that:
‘
.
. . [T]here is no merit in the contention advanced on behalf of the
plaintiff that prescription began to run only on the date the
judgment of the SCA was delivered. The essence of this submission is
that a claim or debt does not become due when the facts from
which it
arose are known to the claimant, but only when such claimant has
acquired certainty in regard to the law and attendant rights
and
obligations that might be applicable to such a debt. If such a
construction were to be placed on the provisions of
section 12(3)
grave absurdity would arise. These provisions regulating prescription
of claims would be rendered nugatory and ineffectual. Prescription
periods would be rendered elastic, open ended and contingent upon the
claimant’s subjective sense of legal certainty. On this contention,
every claimant would be entitled to have legal certainty before the
debt it seeks to enforce becomes or is deemed to be due. In my
view,
legal certainty does not constitute a fact from which a debt arises
under
s 12(3).
A claimant cannot blissfully await authoritative,
final and binding judicial pronouncements before its debt becomes
due, or before
it is deemed to have knowledge of the facts from which
the debt arises.’
[23]
These numerous authorities cited indicate that the exercise to
determine and distinguish
a question of fact from a question of law
when determining whether prescription has started to run, is not an
easy task that should
be dealt with mechanically. It cannot simply be
predetermined on the basis of previous cases. Zondo J appreciated
this difficulty
when he stated as follows in
Mtokonya
:
‘
The
distinction between a question of fact and a question of law is not
always easy to make. How difficult it is will vary from case
to
case.’
[25]
[24]
In the light of the conclusion that I have reached, it is unnecessary
to consider the
alternative argument, ie whether the knowledge of
their attorney, Mr Nilssen, should be imputed to the plaintiffs.
[25]
In the result, the following order is issued:
1
The appeal is upheld
with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and substituted with the
following:
‘
The
special plea of prescription is upheld with costs and the plaintiffs’
action is dismissed with costs.’
B
C MOCUMIE
JUDGE OF
APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
the appellants:
G F Porteous
Instructed
by:
Savage Jooste & Adams, Pretoria
Symington &
De Kok Incorporated, Bloemfontein
For
the
respondents:
C Cutler
Instructed
by:
NME Nilssen & Associates, Cape Town
Mayet &
Associates, Bloemfontein
[1]
The judgment
is reported as
Le
Roux and Another v Nel
and
Another
[2013]
ZASCA 109 (SCA).
[2]
Rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules
of Court
entitles
a court to try issues separately in appropriate circumstances. It is
aimed at facilitating the convenient and expeditious
disposal of
litigation.
[3]
Also called a contract of
mandate.
[4]
Para 31 of
the high court judgment.
[5]
Fluxmans
Incorporated v Levenson
[2016]
ZASCA 183; [2017] 1 All SA 313 (SCA); 2017 (2) SA 520 (SCA).
[6]
Mtokonya v
Minister of Police
[2017]
ZACC 33; 2017 (11) BCLR 1443 (CC);
2018
(5) SA 22 (CC).
[7]
See also
Links
v Department of Health, Northern Province
[2016]
ZACC 10
;
2016 (5) BCLR 656
(CC);
2016 (4) SA 414
(CC) paras 30-35;
and
Truter
v Deysel
[2006]
ZASCA 16
;
2006 (4) SA 168
(SCA) paras 16-19.
[8]
Minister
of Finance and Others v Gore NO
[2006]
ZASCA 98; [2007] 1 All SA 309 (SCA); 2007 (1) SA 111 (SCA).
[9]
Ibid para 17.
[10]
Y
ellow
Star Properties 1020 (Pty) Ltd v MEC: Department of Development
Planning and Local Government, Gauteng
[2009]
ZASCA 25
;
[2009] 3
All SA 475
(SCA);
2009
(3) SA 577
(SCA).
[11]
Ibid para 37.
[12]
Claasen v
Bester
[2011]
ZASCA 197; 2012 (2) SA 404 (SCA).
[13]
Truter and
Another v Deysel
[2006]
ZASCA 16; 2006 (4) SA 168 (SCA).
[14]
Footnote 10 above.
[15]
Ibid para 15.
[16]
Footnote 4
above.
[17]
Ibid paras
10, 32 and 40-44.
[18]
MEC for
Health, Western Cape v M C
[2020]
ZASCA 165
(SCA) paras 6-7.
[19]
McMillan v
Bate Chubb & Dickson Incorporated
[2021]
ZASCA 45
(SCA) paras 38-39.
[20]
Van
Heerden & Brummer Inc v Bath
[2021]
ZASCA 80
(SCA).
[21]
Footnote 20 above.
[22]
Ibid para 8.
[23]
Eskom v
Bojanala Platinum District Municipality and Another
2003 JDR 0498
(T) at 11-12.
[24]
Footnote 23
above para 17.
[25]
Footnote 9
above para 38.
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