Case Law[2022] ZASCA 58South Africa
Mirchandani v Unica Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd and Unica Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd v Mirchandani (802/2020, 813/2020) [2022] ZASCA 58 (22 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
22 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Damages – breach of profit share agreement and lease agreements – claim for payment of utilities and bond charges erroneously debited in appellant’s loan account and damages – tacit term of fiduciary duties – liability in terms of s 218(2) read with s 76(2)(a) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 – and breach of common law fiduciary duty – s 218(2) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 and the common law fiduciary duty not pleaded.
Judgment
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## Mirchandani v Unica Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd and Unica Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd v Mirchandani (802/2020, 813/2020) [2022] ZASCA 58 (22 April 2022)
Mirchandani v Unica Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd and Unica Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd v Mirchandani (802/2020, 813/2020) [2022] ZASCA 58 (22 April 2022)
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sino date 22 April 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case nos: 802/2020
and 813/2020
In the matter
between:
SURESH
CHANDERBHAN MIRCHANDANI
APPELLANT
and
UNICA
IRON & STEEL (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
AND
UNICA
IRON & STEEL (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
SURESH
CHANDERBHAN MIRCHANDANI
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Mirchandani
v Unica Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd and Unica Iron & Steel (Pty)
Ltd v Mirchandani
(Case
no 802/2020 & 813/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 58
(22 April 2022)
Coram:
SALDULKER,
MOCUMIE and MBATHA JJA and TSOKA and WEINER AJJA
Heard
:
4 March 2022
Delivered
:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 22 April 2022.
Summary:
Damages
– breach of profit share agreement and lease agreements – claim
for payment of utilities and bond charges erroneously
debited in
appellant’s loan account and damages – tacit term of fiduciary
duties – liability in terms of s 218(2) read with
s 76(2)
(a)
of
the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
– and breach of common law fiduciary
duty –
s 218(2)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
and the common law
fiduciary duty not pleaded.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Mngqibisa – Thusi J, sitting
as Court of first instance):
Case no: 802/2020
1
The
appeal is upheld with costs including costs of senior counsel.
2
The
judgment of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
2.1
‘
Plaintiff’s
claim 1 is dismissed with costs.
2.2
Defendant
to pay the wasted costs of adjournment of 31 July 2017.
2.3
Defendant
to pay the costs of the application to set aside the subpoena
duces
tecum
of the Plaintiff’s auditor.’
Case no: 813/2020
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs including costs of senior counsel.
JUDGMENT
Tsoka AJA
(Saldulker, Mocumie and Mbatha JJA and Weiner AJA concurring)
[1]
There are two appeals before this court, SCA case no.813/2020 and SCA
case no. 802/2020. In the former
case, Mr Suresh Chanderbhan
Mirchandani (Mr Mirchandani) is the appellant while in the latter
case, Unica Iron & Steel (Pty)
(Ltd) (Unica) is the appellant.
Both are the respondents in the respective cases. In their respective
appeals, they appeal against
the judgment and orders granted by the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high court) on 3
March 2020, which orders
were corrected by the high court on 4
September 2020. Both appeals are with leave of the high court.
[2]
The background facts in these matters are the following: in terms of
a written Profit Share Agreement
(the profit agreement) concluded
between Mr Mirchandani and the respondent, Unica, on 21 May 2007,
which profit agreement was backdated
to 4 December 2006, the former
agreed to work for the latter as a technical director on a profit
sharing basis. In the agreement,
it is recorded that Mr Mirchandani
will be a key person under whose leadership and guidance, Unica will
source, commission and run
its plant in Babelegi, Hammanskraal,
successfully. The plant is hereafter referred to as Unica 1.
[3]
It is common cause that pursuant to the profit agreement, Mr
Mirchandani sourced, commissioned and ran
Unica’s plant
successfully until his association with Unica 1 was mutually
terminated on 30 September 2010.
[4]
Subsequent to the termination of his employment with Unica in 2010,
Unica was in the process of establishing
a second plant to be known
as Unica 2. As Mr Mirchandani was unhappy in leaving Unica, he
reported the company to the Gauteng
Department of Rural Development
(GDRD). In the report, he alleged that in establishing Unica 1, the
directors deliberately breached
the applicable environmental laws, in
particular, the provisions of the National Environmental Management
Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA),
in that Unica 1 operated without ensuring
that the provisions of NEMA were duly complied with and that the
operation of the company
would not endanger the environment.
[5]
As a result of the complaint Mr Mirchandani laid against Unica with
GDRD, Unica was charged in terms of
the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of
1977 (the CPA) for the contravention of the provisions of NEMA. In
terms of s 105A of the CPA, a
Plea and Sentence Agreement (the plea
agreement) was concluded between Unica and GDRD in terms of which the
former was fined a R5
million penalty, half of which was suspended,
plus R3 million in respect of the rehabilitation of the environment.
[6]
It is Unica’s contention that the profit agreement concluded
between it and Mr Mirchandani in 2006 was
that the parties, in
concluding the agreement explicitly, alternatively tacitly, further
alternatively, impliedly agreed that Mr
Mirchandani, as technical
director and the responsible person for ensuring the commissioning of
Unica 1, would ensure that Unica
complied with the provisions of
NEMA. He, however, failed to do so. His failure, so the contentions
went, were in breach of the profit
agreement.
[7]
The contentions that Mr Mirchandani, as the technical director of
Unica breached the terms of the profit
agreement are unfounded.
Firstly, the profit agreement does not expressly state that
compliance with the provisions of NEMA was indeed
a term of the
agreement. Secondly, on the evidence of the other co-directors, Mr
Irshad Ul Haq (Mr Ul Haq) and Mr Mohammed Asif Qasim
(Mr Qasim),
compliance with the provisions of NEMA could not have been a tacit
term of the profit agreement, as according to them,
they were unaware
of the applicability of the provisions of NEMA when the profit
agreement was concluded between the parties. The
inevitable
conclusion is that the profit agreement could therefore not have been
entered into in contemplation of the provisions
of that Act. On the
contrary, it is Mr Mirchandani’s evidence that the provisions of
NEMA were not complied with as a result of
a deliberate and conscious
decision of the board of directors of Unica not to comply with the
provisions of the Act, as to do so,
would delay the coming into
operation of the plant for a period of 18-24 months, which delay the
company could ill-afford as the
company was eager to commence its
operations and start generating income.
[8]
Mr Mirchandani’s evidence that the provisions of NEMA were
deliberately not complied with is more probable
than the denial of
both Mr Ul Haq and Mr Qasim. Mr Mirchandani’s testimony is
corroborated by the following: (a) while Mr Mirchandani
was outside
the country and unavailable, the other two co-directors, namely, Mr
Ul Haq and Mr Qasim completed an Industrial Development
Corporation
(IDC) application to raise funds for the operation of the plant.
Amongst the requirements that the IDC required to be
fulfilled before
funding could be provided, was compliance with the provisions of any
environmental legislation, such as NEMA. Both
Mr Ul Haq and Mr
Qasim’s signatures were appended to the said application. Their
statement that they were not aware and not involved,
while they had
to comply with the requirements of the IDC to obtain financial
assistance, is improbable; (b) it is common cause that
for the
successful operation of the plant, the plant required electricity.
When Eskom was approached to supply the company with electricity,
it
expressly demanded that the company be compliant with any applicable
environmental legislation. The directors, without demur,
stated that
the company was indeed compliant, hence Eskom agreed to supply the
company with electricity; and (c) when Eskom’s senior
personnel met
with the directors subsequent to the application for the supply of
electricity, he was again assured that Unica 1 was
indeed compliant
with any applicable environmental legislation.
[9]
To show that Mr Ul Haq and Mr Qasim’s version, with regard to NEMA,
is improbable, is further corroborated
by the terms of the plea
agreement reached with the GDRD when the company was criminally
charged for contravening the provisions
of NEMA. The entire plea
agreement, including the mitigating circumstances spelled out
therein, does not suggest that the company
operated as it did because
it was misled by Mr Mirchandani. That the allocation of blame to Mr
Mirchandani, is an afterthought, because
the relationship between the
directors of Unica became toxic, appears more probable than that the
non-compliance was solely due to
Mr Mirchandani alleged breach of his
fiduciary duties to Unica.
[10]
The
inevitable conclusion reached is that the three directors, with their
eyes open, took a conscious decision not to comply with
the
provisions of NEMA. In these circumstances, it is inexplicable why
the one director should take the blame while the other two
are
absolved. In the circumstances of this matter, non-compliance with
the provisions of NEMA must surely be shouldered by Unica
and its
three directors.
[11] Mr
Mirchandani’s testimony that the company knowingly contravened the
provisions of NEMA on the basis that, should
the authorities become
aware of the contravention of the provisions of the Act, refuge could
be sought by reliance on s 24G of NEMA
ie rectification, cannot
therefore be faulted. In terms of the provisions of this section, a
non-compliant company may apply for
condonation, on pain of paying a
penalty and remedial damages to the GDRD, for the late compliance
with the provisions of the NEMA.
This, in the result, is what Unica
did. It is therefore incorrect for Unica to accuse Mr Mirchandani of
being untruthful in the high
court when he testified that there was
non-compliance with the provisions of NEMA because in 2006, s 24G of
NEMA had not yet been
promulgated and was therefore not applicable.
Mr Mirchandani’s evidence regarding rectification in terms of s 24G
is correct, as
it is supported by the following: it is common cause
that NEMA was amended on 14 July 2004 by s 3 of the National
Environmental Management
Act 8 of 2004. At the time of the trial of
this matter, and his testimony, in the high court, the provisions of
s 24G of NEMA were
indeed applicable. In this Court, counsel for
Unica readily conceded that indeed when Mr Mirchandani testified, s
24G of NEMA was
applicable with the result that the process of
rectification as testified to by Mr Mirchandani was indeed available
for Unica to
utilize.
[12]
Unica’s claim for damages, allegedly, on the basis of breach of
fiduciary duty in terms of the common law is also
unfounded and
untenable. The evidence on record reveals no such breach. It is
undisputed that Mr Mirchandani, as the technical director
of the
company, complied diligently with the terms of the profit agreement.
And because of him being a diligent technical director,
at the time
of termination of his relationship with Unica, the plant was, as a
matter of fact, operational and profitable. During
his tenure as the
technical director of the company, he pursued the interests of the
company rather than his own. This being the
case, there cannot be any
suggestions that while being the technical director, he breached his
fiduciary duties as alleged or at
all.
[13]
It is worth restating what breach of fiduciary entails. In
Master
of the High Court Western Cape Division, Cape Town v Van Zyl
[1]
the court stated:
‘
Breach
of fiduciary duty entails something materially different from the
negligent discharge of his or her functions by a person in
a
fiduciary position. Millett LJ (as he then was) stressed this action
in
Briston
and West Building Society v Mothew (t/a Stapley & Co)
[1998]1 Ch 1[1996]4 All ER 698(CA) at p.712 [All ER], noting that
“The Various obligations of a fiduciary merely reflect different
aspects of his core duties of loyalty and fidelity.
Breach
of fiduciary obligation, therefore, connotes disloyalty or
infidelity. Mere incompetence is not enough. A servant who loyally
does his incompetent best for his master is not unfaithful and is not
guilty of a breach of fiduciary duty
”.’
(Emphasis
added.)
[14] In
casu, at best for Unica, Mr Mirchandani was, at most, incompetent, if
at all. Like in
Van Zyl
, he may have done his ‘incompetent
best’ to see to it that Unica 1 was operational and profitable. It
cannot therefore be said
that he was unfaithful and disloyal to Unica
and thus breached his fiduciary duties to the company.
[15]
That
Unica’s
claim based on common law breach of fiduciary duty is unfounded and
is further supported by the testimony of Mr Ul Haq.
In the court a
quo, he conceded that as the CEO, he knew that the company should
have complied with the by-laws. Surprisingly, he
pleaded ignorance to
the provisions of NEMA, the national legislation and a constitutional
imperative that guarantees the safe environment
for all. Furthermore,
his denial that none of the directors, but Mr Mirchandani, were aware
of the applicability of the provisions
of NEMA is therefore
improbable. This leads me to the alleged breach of s 218 read with
s 76(2)
(a)
of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (the
Companies Act)
.
[16]
Unica’s
reliance on the provisions of
s 218
of the
Companies Act, is
misplaced. It was neither pleaded, nor were the facts alluding to the
applicability of the provisions of the said section stated,
to enable
Mr Mirchandani to plead thereto and to raise any defence that may
have been available to him in terms of
s 77
of the same Act, such as
prescription. The reliance on the provisions of
s 218
of the
Companies Act, is
a non-starter. For the court a quo to base its
reasoning on the provisions of the section, which was not pleaded is,
in my view,
a misdirection. The misdirection must be corrected.
[17]
In
Maake
v Chemfit Finechemical (Pty) Ltd
[2]
the Full Court, dealing with a litigant who relied on the provisions
of
s 218
, reasoned as follows: -
‘
Section 218
of
the [Companies Act] provides a general remedy to any person who
suffers loss or damages as a result of contravention of the Act.
However, it does not specify which contravention the person may sue
for. A creditor may sue a director of a company in his/her personal,
capacity for the loss or damage it has suffered as a result of that
director(s) actions. Since the section does not specify which
actions
may be regarded as contravention of the [Companies Act],
it
follows that the creditor who sues must specify which contravention
were attributed to the director(s) and the exact losses or
damages
with sufficient particulars. Sufficient facts should be pleaded to
enable the director(s) to know which case they would meet
.’
(Emphasis added.)
[18] As
pointed out above, Unica did not, in the court a quo plead sufficient
facts to enable Mr Mirchandani to know which
case he had to meet.
This failure was not only prejudicial to Mr Mirchandani but breached
the timeless rule of our procedural law
that a litigant, such as
Unica, must plead sufficient facts to enable its counterparty to know
which case he/she has to meet. Not
to do so, is extremely
prejudicial. So, was the case in the present matter.
[19]
Unica’s
reliance on
Breetzke
and Others NO v Alexander
[3]
,
a
decision of this Court, in support of its argument that Mr
Mirchandani breached his fiduciary duties in terms of
s 218
of the
Companies Act, is
thus misplaced. The facts in that matter are
distinguishable from the facts in the present matter. In that matter,
a trustee abused
his position to further his own interests over the
interests of the trust, which he ought to have served. In the present
matter,
it is undisputed that Mr Mirchandani served the interests of
Unica rather than his own. In
Breetzke
this Court, unequivocally, stated that ‘. . . The fiduciary must
place the interests of the other party to whom the duty is owed
before their own. . .’.
[20]
Thus, Unica has failed to prove that the term it relied on was
express, tacit or implied.
In
the present matter, there is neither suggestion nor evidence that Mr
Mirchandani breached his fiduciary duties to Unica in furtherance
of
his own interests. To the contrary, as technical director, he
breached the provisions of NEMA, in furtherance of Unica’s
interests
and not for his own. For this breach by Mr Mirchandani,
Unica 1 became operational and profitable. That the alleged breach of
the
fiduciary duties owed to Unica, in not complying with the
provisions of NEMA, was solely for the benefit of Unica and the plant
and
not for his own, admits no doubt.
[21]
In
the result, the conclusion reached is that Unica’s claim for
damages against Mr Mirchandani arising out a breach of fiduciary
duties must fail. Accordingly, the appeal must succeed.
[22]
With regard to the accounting action relating to the rental charges
and bond repayments raised against his loan account
in Unica, Mr
Mirchandani testified that the parties agreed to buy a house for him
to live in it with his family. At the beginning,
the parties agreed
that Mr Mirchandani would service the bond used to acquire the house.
But this did not meet the approval of Mr
Qasim’s father who
suggested that Mr Mirchandani should rather rent the house until the
purchased house was transferred into his
name.
[23] It
was on this basis that the two lease agreements were concluded. On
expiry of the first lease agreement, which
was for a period of three
years, a second lease agreement, also for a three-year period, was
concluded. The parties to the lease
agreements agreed that Mr
Mirchandani would pay rental while the charges for utilities such as
water, electricity and taxes, probably
rates and taxes, would be for
the lessor’s account. That is to say, the utilities were to be paid
by Unica and not by Mr Mirchandani.
[24]
Contrary
to the agreements concluded, Mr Mirchandani’s loan account in
Unica, was, however, debited with the bond repayments instead
of the
rental charges due and payable by him as well as the charges relating
to water, electricity and taxes, which in terms of the
lease
agreements, as pointed above, were to be for the lessor’s account.
This resulted in Mr Mirchandani’s loan account being
debited with
bond charges which were higher instead of the rental amounts which
were lower. The net effect was that Mr Mirchandani’s
share profit
was adversely affected. This was the amount which Mr Mirchandani
instituted an action for and succeeded in the high
court.
[25]
In
addition, Mr Mirchandani claimed for his director’s salary as well
as wastages, which according to him, were agreed to be capped
at 5%
to maximise the profitability of Unica 1. This, in turn would
inevitably have no material effect on his 17% share profit in
terms
of the profit agreement concluded with Unica.
[26]
Unica’s contention that the issue of salaries and wastages were not
resolved at the meeting of the directors on
15 April 2010 is not
supported by the evidence on record. It is both Mr Mirchandani and Mr
Qasim’s evidence that the issue of wastages
was resolved in that
meeting of 15 April 2010. At page 932 of the record, Mr Qasim
confirmed the said agreement in the following
terms ‘M-lady this
wastage allowance was discussed in this meeting on 15 April 2010…it
was myself, I took the initiative and
I requested my other
co-director that can we now allow this thing for 5%,
and was
agreed
’. (Emphasis added.)
[27] For
Unica to turn around and contend that the issue of wastages was not
agreed to, on the basis of the facts recited
by this Court in an
earlier dispute that was resolved in 2016
[4]
,
is untenable. In that matter, this Court was required to determine
whether a document signed by the parties constituted a valid
agreement. The fact that this Court then referred to the meeting of
15 April 2010 and stated that the issue of 5% was not resolved
does
not amount to res judicata. The reference to that meeting and the
issue of 5% is irrelevant and of no consequence. This Court’s
reference to that meeting and the 5% wastage was in any event in
passing, as the real issue to be determined was whether the document
signed by the parties constituted an agreement or not. It was an
obiter statement, which does not affect the issues in the present
case. Mr Ul Haq’s statement that the issue of wastages was not
agreed to, on the basis of the previous court decision, cannot
therefore
be upheld. In any event, should he not have agreed to this,
the other two co-directors, who were in the majority, agreed on the
5%
wastages. The agreement is therefore binding on him. The agreement
of Mr Mirchandani and Mr Qasim is thus the decision of Unica.
His dissatisfaction in this regard is irrelevant and of no
consequence.
[28] In
the pre-trial minutes, the parties agreed on the quantum of damages
due to Mr Mirchandani with regard to his accounting
claims. It was on
this basis that the high court, after finding in favour of Mr
Mirchandani, ordered that the agreed amount be paid
to him.
[29]
In
the high court and in this Court, Unica submitted that the lease
agreements were a sham and that no legal consequences should flow
therefrom. Furthermore, it contended that the lease agreements were
concluded solely to enable Mr Mirchandani to comply with
the
FICA requirements. The onus to prove these allegations rested on
Unica.
[30] In
the main, Unica, in attempting to discharge its burden of proof, and
in substantiation that the lease agreements
were a sham, contended
that the lease agreements referred to two addresses, which were
different to the property in which Mr Mirchandani
resided.
[31]
Unica’s contention in this regard is far from the truth. It is
undisputed that the property purchased by Mr Qasim
is 30 Blesbuck
Avenue, Eldo Manor, Centurion. The two lease agreements concluded
between the parties, described the house to be rented
as ‘No 30
Blesbuck Avenue, Eldo Manor Centurion’. That this was the house
acquired by Mr Qasim for Mr Mirchandani to live in,
and to which the
two lease agreements relate, is more than clear. For Unica to contend
that the house being rented, as described
on page 2 of the lease
agreements, being 8 Jackal Street, Eldo Manor, Centurion, is nothing
but disingenuous. It is common cause
that the house purchased by Mr
Qasim and rented to Mr Mirchandani was 30 Blesbuck Avenue, Eldo
Manor, Centurion and not 8 Jackal
Street.
[32]
The sensible interpretation of the lease agreements, on the authority
of this Court, in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[5]
,
is that the house rented to Mr Mirchandani, to which he would
ultimately acquire, was 30 Blesbuck Avenue, Eldo Manor, Centurion
and
not 8 Jackal Street. It appears to me that the description of the
house let as 8 Jackal Street, Eldo Manor, Centurion, is nothing
but a
common error, which could easily have been rectified.
[33] The
contention that the lease agreements were concluded for the purposes
of FICA also appears to be untrue, or at
least, improbable. If the
agreements were indeed concluded for the purposes of FICA, on Unica’s
evidence, which of the two houses
was to be regarded as by the
authorities as Mr Mirchandani’s proof of residence? Why then, if
the agreements were solely for FICA
purposes, backdate them? If the
agreements were a sham and were concluded for the purposes of FICA,
there is no logical basis for
them to have been backdated. It is
undisputed that the house purchased for Mr Mirchandani, which was
rented to him pending transfer
into his name, and which house was for
the purposes of FICA to be regarded by the authorities as his
residence, was 30 Blesbuck Street
and not number 8 Jackal Street.
Unica’s contention that the lease agreements were a sham and were
not to be relied on is nothing
else but a diversion. The lease
agreements were therefore correctly found by the court a quo to be
legal and binding.
[34] In
this Court, Unica argued that the rental amount for the second year
being less than the first and third year is
further proof that the
agreements were a sham. Again, this contention is also untenable.
There is a myriad of reasons why the parties
agreed to the renewal
amount as they did. It is therefore not for this Court to
second-guess the reason why the parties concluded
the lease
agreements as they did. It is impermissible for this Court to
interpret the lease agreements on the basis as to what is
reasonable,
as to do so, the Court would be making the agreements for the
parties. See
Endumeni
referred to above.
[35] The
conclusion reached is that Unica failed to discharge its onus of
proof regarding the accounting claims. In the
result, the appeal on
the accounting issue must fail.
[36] The
following order is made:
Case no: 802/2020
1
The
appeal is upheld with costs including costs of senior counsel.
2
The
judgment of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
2.1
‘
Plaintiff’s
claim 1 is dismissed with costs.
2.2
Defendant
to pay the wasted costs of adjournment of 31 July 2017.
2.3
Defendant
to pay the costs of the application to set aside the subpoena
duces
tecum
of the Plaintiff’s auditor.’
Case no: 813/2020
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs including costs of senior counsel.
M TSOKA
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
Case no: 802/2020
For
appellant:
B Stoop SC
Instructed
by:
Hajibey-Bhyat Inc, Johannesburg
Van der Merwe &
Sorour Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For respondent:
OA Moosa SC
Instructed
by:
Pather and Pather Inc, Durban
Claude Reid,
Bloemfontein.
Case no: 813/2020
For
appellant:
OA Moosa SC
Instructed
by:
Pather and Pather Inc, Durban
Claude Reid,
Bloemfontein.
For respondent:
B Stoop SC
Instructed
by:
Hajibey-Bhyat Inc, Johannesburg
Van der Merwe &
Sorour Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Master of the High Court,
Western Cape Division, Cape Town v Van Zyl
[2019] JOL 41274
(WCC) para 108.
[2]
Maake v Chemfit Finechemical
(Pty)
Ltd [2018]
ZALMPPHC 71 para 28.
[3]
Breetzke and Others NO v
Alexander
[2020] JOL
48345
(SCA) para36.
[4]
Unica
Iron and Steel v Mirchandani
[2015]
ZASCA 150; 2016 (2) SA 307 (SCA).
[5]
Natal Joint Municipal Pension
Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA).
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