Case Law[2022] ZASCA 73South Africa
Limpopo Economic Development Agency v Klopper NO & 10 Others (982/2020) [2022] ZASCA 73 (25 May 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
25 May 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28 of 2002 – conversion of old order mining right into new order mining right – interpretation of shareholders agreement – interpretation of clause of mining right.
Judgment
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## Limpopo Economic Development Agency v Klopper NO & 10 Others (982/2020) [2022] ZASCA 73 (25 May 2022)
Limpopo Economic Development Agency v Klopper NO & 10 Others (982/2020) [2022] ZASCA 73 (25 May 2022)
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sino date 25 May 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no. 982/2020
In the matter between:
LIMPOPO ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
APPELLANT
and
JOHANNES FREDERICK
KLOPPER NO
FIRST RESPONDENT
CHRISTOPHER RAYMOND
REY NO
SECOND RESPONDENT
LIEBENBERG DAWID RYK
VAN DER MERWE NO
THIRD
RESPONDENT
LEBOGANE MPAKATI NO
FOURTH RESPONDENT
DILOKONG CHROME MINE
(PTY) LTD
FIFTH RESPONDENT
ASA METALS (PTY) LTD
SIXTH RESPONDENT
EASTERN ASIA METAL
INVESTMENT CO LTD
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
MINISTER OF MINERAL
RESOURCES
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF
MINERAL RESOURCES
NINTH RESPONDENT
REGIONAL MANAGER,
LIMPOPO DIVISION OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF MINERAL
RESOURCES
TENTH RESPONDENT
CHEETAH CHROME SOUTH
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
ELEVENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Limpopo
Economic Development Agency v Klopper NO & 10 Others
(Case no. 982/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 73
(25 May 2022)
Coram:
Petse DP, Plasket, Mbatha and Carelse JJA and Musi
AJA
Heard:
3 March 2022
Delivered:
25 May 2022
Summary:
Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28
of 2002
– conversion of old order mining right into new order
mining right – interpretation of shareholders agreement –
interpretation of clause of mining right.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Local Division of
the High Court, Johannesburg (Coppin J sitting as court of first
instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Plasket JA (Carelse JA
and Musi AJA concurring):
[1]
The appellant, the Limpopo Economic Development Agency (LEDA), holds
40 percent of
the shares of the sixth respondent, ASA Metals (Pty)
Ltd (ASA). The seventh respondent, Eastern Asia Metal Investment Co
Ltd (EAMI),
holds the remaining 60 percent of ASA’s shares.
ASA, in turn, is the sole shareholder of the fifth respondent,
Dilokong Chrome
Mine (Pty) Ltd (DCM). Both DCM and ASA are under
business rescue, the first and second respondents being the business
rescue practitioners
(BRPs) of DCM, and the third and fourth
respondents being the BRPs of ASA.
[2]
As DCM’s name suggests, it is a company that mines chrome. It
now does so on
the authority of a mining right issued in terms of the
Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28 of 2002 (the
MPRDA).
Pursuant to a decision taken by DCM’s BRPs to sell its
mining right to the eleventh respondent, Cheetah Chrome South Africa
(Pty) Ltd (Cheetah), LEDA launched an application in the Gauteng
Local Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the high court)
in
which it sought wide-ranging relief that included, inter alia, a
declarator that it held a 40 percent stake in DCM’s mining
right; a prohibitory interdict to restrain DCM and its BRPs from
disposing of the mining right without LEDA’s consent; and
a
mandatory interdict to compel DCM to conclude an agreement with LEDA
‘contemplated by clause 17 of the Mining Right’
within
three months.
[3]
The application was dismissed with costs by Coppin J. He refused
leave to appeal.
Leave was subsequently granted on petition by this
court.
[4]
Despite the wide-ranging relief that was claimed by LEDA, the issues
for determination
are limited. They hinge, ultimately, on one issue:
the interpretation of clause 17 of DCM’s mining right.
Background
[5]
DCM was incorporated in 1978 and began its chrome mining operations
thereafter. It
did so under the authority of a so-called old order
mining right – one issued in terms of the legislation which was
in force
before the coming into operation of the MPRDA on 1 May
2004.
[1]
[6]
Item 7 of Schedule II provided for the conversion of old order mining
rights to new
order mining rights issued in terms of the MPRDA. It
did so by preserving the validity of old order mining rights for a
period,
during which holders were given the opportunity to apply for
the conversion of their rights.
[2]
[7]
Item 7(3) placed an obligation on the Minister of Minerals and Energy
to convert old
order mining rights into mining rights under the MPRDA
if the formal requirements of an application, set out in item 7(2),
were
complied with; if a holder ‘has conducted mining
operations in respect of the right in question’; if they
undertake
that they will continue with those mining operations once
their right has been converted; if they have an approved
environmental
management program; and if they have paid the
prescribed conversion fee.
[8]
In terms of item 7(7), on the conversion of the right and its
registration, the old
order right ceases to exist. In terms of item
7(8), if a holder does not apply for conversion before the expiry of
the period of
grace referred to in item 7(1), the old order mining
right ceases to exist.
[9]
DCM applied for the conversion of its old order mining right. The
converted mining
right was issued to it on 20 March 2014.
[10]
DCM was placed under business rescue on 24 March 2016. As part of the
business rescue plan, the
BRPs envisaged the sale of DCM’s
mining right. LEDA was interested in acquiring it. To this end, it
participated in a ‘bid-out’.
Bidders were required to pay
a deposit of R50 million in order to take part. LEDA made an offer of
R450 million. Cheetah submitted
an offer of R456 million. It was
accordingly the successful bidder.
[11]
At this point, LEDA, having become aware of clause 17 of DCM’s
mining right some time before
the ‘bid-out’, sought to
prevent the sale of the mining right to Cheetah. It did so, inter
alia, by launching the proceedings
that are the subject of this
appeal. On 1 November 2019, the Director-General of the Department of
Mineral Resources, on behalf
of the Minister, granted consent in
terms of s 11 of the MPRDA for the cession of DCM’s mining
right to Cheetah. LEDA has
taken this decision on internal appeal to
the Minister in terms of s 96 of the MPRDA.
The shareholders
agreement
[12]
LEDA, then known as the Limpopo Economic Development Enterprise
(Limdev), and EAMI entered into
a shareholders agreement on 11
December 2006. They did so in relation to the ‘company’,
defined in clause 1.2.4 as
ASA. In clause 1.2.2, the term ‘business’
is defined to mean ‘the business to be conducted by the
company’,
including the ‘business of an investment
holding company and more particularly, the holding of an investment
in Dilokong
Chrome Mine (Pty) Ltd’ and ‘[c]onducting the
business of a ferrochrome smelting plant and related activities,
including
sales of finished chrome products’.
[13]
DCM is referred to in clause 1.2.7 and, in clause 1.2.8, the term
‘designated business’
is defined as ‘the business
to be carried on by DCM as a subsidiary of the company as
contemplated in this agreement, namely
the mining and sale of chrome
ore to the company and to parties in favour of whom it has supply
commitments’.
[14]
Two major issues that are dealt with in the shareholders agreement
stand out. They are the planned
expansion of the business of ASA and
the inclusion of a BEE shareholder. As the second issue is
particularly relevant to this matter
I shall, in outlining the terms
of the shareholders agreement focus on it.
[15]
The need for the inclusion of a BEE shareholder in ASA arose because
neither LEDA or EAMI were
historically disadvantaged South Africans
for the purposes of the MPRDA
[3]
and the Mining Charter. This was recognized in clause 1.2.1 of the
shareholders agreement which defined the term ‘BEE transaction’
as ‘any transaction/s in terms of which shares are sold to a
BEE corporate body to ensure that the company complies with
the
Mining Charter’.
[16]
Clause 5.1 provides that ASA’s shareholding structure would be
changed to cater for ‘the
introduction of a BEE shareholder at
the company level’. LEDA was required to identify, and then
negotiate with the BEE shareholder,
subject to ‘the approval of
the shareholders in general meeting’. That person would
purchase shares from LEDA so that
they would hold 30 percent ‘of
the total issued capital of the company’. The entire process
was required, in terms
of clause 5.2, to be completed by the end of
March 2007 or an agreed extended period. Clause 5.2 proceeds to say:
‘
It
is further agreed that the identified BEE shareholder, if approved at
the shareholders meeting, shall be expected to bind himself
to this
agreement, failing which he shall be disqualified. The parties hereby
agree that for the identified BEE partner to be approved
he must,
amongst others, be broad based, compliant with the Broad Based Black
Economic Empowerment Act and the mining Charter and
be a single
corporate entity.’
[17]
Clauses 5.4 and 5.5 record the effect of the inclusion of a BEE
shareholder on ASA’s shareholders.
Prior to the proposed
transfer of shares from LEDA to the new shareholder, LEDA would hold
40 percent of the shares, or 13 750 000
shares, while EAMI
would hold 60 percent of the shares, or 20 625 000 shares.
After the proposed transfer of shares from
LEDA to the new
shareholder, EAMI would continue to hold 60 percent of the shares,
while LEDA would hold ten percent, or 3 437 500
shares, and
the BEE shareholder would hold 30 percent of the shares, or
10 312 500 shares.
[18]
Clause 5.6 provided for the event of the BEE shareholder wishing to
sell its shares in ASA. If
it wished to do so, it first had to comply
with clause 21 which provided inter alia that the shares had first to
be offered to
the other shareholders. If it sold to an outsider, that
purchaser had to be ‘a single corporate entity which is
approved
by the shareholders’ and be ‘broad-based,
compliant with the Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment Act and be
approved
by the Department of Minerals and Energy’.
[19]
It is not in dispute that LEDA never identified a BEE shareholder to
purchase its shares in ASA.
The result was that when ASA was placed
in business rescue, its shareholding was unchanged from the position
that applied at the
commencement of the shareholders agreement.
DCM’s mining
right
[20]
As stated above, DCM’s old order mining right was converted to
a mining right in terms
of the MRPDA. Clause 2 of the mining right
effected this conversion by providing that ‘[w]ithout
detracting from the provisions
of item 7 of the schedule to the Act,
sections 5 and 25 of the Act, the Minister converts the holder’s
old order right and
grants to the Holder the sole and exclusive right
to mine, and recover the mineral/s in, on or under the mining area
for the Holder’s
own benefit and account, and to deal with,
remove and sell or otherwise dispose of the mineral/s, subject to the
terms and conditions
of this mining right, the provisions of the Act
and any other relevant law in force for the duration of this right’.
The
term ‘holder’ is defined in the unnumbered
definitions clause as DCM.
[21]
In terms of clause 3, the mining right became operative on 20 March
2014 and continues in force
until 19 March 2044 – a period of
30 years. It authorized the mining of chrome ore in a defined mining
area. Mining operations
were required to be conducted in accordance
with a mining work program and an environmental management plan.
[22]
Clause 17, the provision that is central to this matter, is headed
‘Provisions relating
to sections 2(d) and (f) of the Act’.
Those sections are two of the nine objects of the MPRDA. The section
reads as follows:
‘
The
objects of this Act are to-
(a)
recognise the internationally accepted right of
the State to exercise sovereignty over all the mineral and petroleum
resources within
the Republic;
(b)
give effect to the principle of the State's
custodianship of the nation's mineral and petroleum resources;
(c)
promote equitable access to the nation's mineral
and petroleum resources to all the people of South Africa;
(d)
substantially and meaningfully expand
opportunities for historically disadvantaged persons, including women
and communities, to
enter into and actively participate in the
mineral and petroleum industries and to benefit from the exploitation
of the nation's
mineral and petroleum resources;
(e)
promote economic growth and mineral and petroleum
resources development in the Republic, particularly development of
downstream
industries through provision of feedstock, and development
of mining and petroleum inputs industries;
(f)
promote employment and advance the social and
economic welfare of all South Africans;
(g)
provide for security of tenure in respect of
prospecting, exploration, mining and production operations;
(h)
give effect to section 24 of the Constitution by
ensuring that the nation's mineral and petroleum resources are
developed in an
orderly and ecologically sustainable manner while
promoting justifiable social and economic development; and
(i)
ensure that holders of mining and production
rights contribute towards the socio-economic development of the areas
in which they
are operating.’
[23]
Clause 17 of the mining right provides as follows:
‘
In
the furthering of the objects of this Act, the Holder is bound by the
provisions of an agreement or arrangement dated 11 DECEMBER
2006
entered into between the Holder/empowering partner and it is being
recorded that the parties shall within 3 (three) months
of executing
the right, conclude a new agreement wherein Limpopo Economic
Development Agency will hold 40% of stake in the right
without an
obligation to dilute. The above is subject to the transfer of Limpopo
Economic Development 40% stake at a later stage
to SOMCO upon due
notice by the Minister (the empowerment partner) which agreement or
arrangement was taken into consideration
for purposes of compliance
with the requirements of the Act and or Broad Based Economic
Empowerment Charter developed in terms
of the Act and such agreement
shall form part of this right.’
The judgment of the
high court
[24]
In the high court, Coppin J held, correctly, that the case turned on
the interpretation of clause
17 of the mining right. This was so
because LEDA’s entire case was premised on the Minister having
granted to it, in clause
17, a 40 percent stake in DCM’s mining
right or, alternatively, that the Minister placed an obligation on
DCM to grant to
LEDA that stake in its mining right.
[25]
He found that LEDA’s interpretation of clause 17 was incorrect,
principally because it
ignored the context and purpose of the clause
in favour of a literal interpretation that opportunistically sought
to take advantage
of the ‘inelegant and poor construction and
wording of clause 17’. The result was an interpretation that
was unbusinesslike
and flawed.
[26]
Coppin J concluded:
‘
Clause
17 merely means that the Minister (or his delegate) required the
shareholders agreement to be amended, insofar as it required
that
LEDA transfer 30% of its 40% stake in the shareholding of ASAM, which
was the sole shareholder of DCM and effectively in control
of DCM, to
the BEE partner, and instead, provide that LEDA would hold onto its
40% shareholding stake until duly notified by the
Minister, whereupon
it had to transfer the entire 40% stake. This, according to clause 17
was to satisfy the objectives articulated
in section 2(d) and (f) of
the MPRDA.’
The interpretation of
clause 17
[27]
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[4]
this court set out the proper approach to the interpretation of
written instruments as follows:
‘
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence.
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. Where more than one
meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of all these
factors. The process is objective, not subjective.
A sensible meaning
is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the document. Judges
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible
or businesslike for the
words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and
legislation; in a contractual context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact
made. The “inevitable
point of departure is the language of the provision itself”,
read in context and having regard
to the purpose of the provision and
the background to the preparation and production of the document.’
[28]
The court continued to explain the mechanics of interpretation
process when it stated:
[5]
‘
Which
of the interpretational factors I have mentioned will predominate in
any given situation varies. Sometimes the language of
the provision,
when read in its particular context, seems clear and admits of little
if any ambiguity. Courts say in such cases
that they adhere to the
ordinary grammatical meaning of the words used. However, that too is
a misnomer. It is a product of a time
when language was viewed
differently and regarded as likely to have a fixed and definite
meaning; a view that the experience of
lawyers down the years, as
well as the study of linguistics, has shown to be mistaken. Most
words can bear several different meanings
or shades of meaning and to
try to ascertain their meaning in the abstract, divorced from the
broad context of their use, is an
unhelpful exercise. The expression
can mean no more than that, when the provision is read in context,
that is the appropriate meaning
to give to the language used. At the
other extreme, where the context makes it plain that adhering to the
meaning suggested by
apparently plain language would lead to glaring
absurdity, the court will ascribe a meaning to the language that
avoids the absurdity.
This is said to involve a departure from the
plain meaning of the words used. More accurately it is either a
restriction or extension
of the language used by the adoption of a
narrow or broad meaning of the words, the selection of a less
immediately apparent meaning
or sometimes the correction of an
apparent error in the language in order to avoid the identified
absurdity.’
[29]
It is common cause that the ‘agreement or arrangement’
referred to in clause 17 is
the shareholders agreement concluded by
EAMI and LEDA in respect of ASA. It is clear that the Minister has
put in place an arrangement
that differs from the agreement concluded
by EAMI and LEDA but never implemented. SOMCO, the entity referred to
in clause 17 as
the ‘empowerment partner’ is African
Exploration Mining and Finance Corporation SOC Ltd, the State-Owned
Mining Company
which was established to hold and operate the State’s
mining assets and to mine strategically important minerals on behalf
of the State.
[30]
It is also clear that clause 17 is particularly poorly drafted. Its
drafter was confused as to
the relationship between LEDA and EAMI,
ASA and DCM. They were also confused about what the shareholders
agreement sought to do
and as to the nature of shareholding in a
company. In respect of this last point, in
Princess
Estate and Gold Mining Co Ltd v Registrar of Mining Titles
,
[6]
it was made clear that the assets of a company belong to the company
and not its shareholders, and that shareholders only have
a right to
their share of any dividend that may be declared. This trite
principle was confirmed recently by this court in
Clicks
Group Ltd and Others v Independent Community Pharmacy Association and
Others
,
[7]
citing with approval a line of well-known cases.
[8]
[31]
I turn now to the point of departure – the words of clause 17.
The first point that I note
is that the drafter has made patent
errors in the choice of language that they used. First, in relation
to the shareholders agreement,
they stated that the ‘Holder’
was bound by it. As the term ‘Holder’ is defined in the
definitions clause
as DCM, that is obviously incorrect: DCM was never
a party to it and, unsurprisingly, no obligations to do anything or
abstain
from doing anything were imposed on it. Secondly, the drafter
stated that the shareholders agreement was ‘entered into
between
the Holder/empowering partner’. That too is erroneous
to the extent that this suggests that the parties to the shareholders
agreement were DCM – the ’Holder’ – and LEDA
– the ‘empowering partner’. It clearly was
an
agreement concluded by LEDA and EAMI in relation to their
shareholdings in ASA.
[32]
What is to be done in the case of drafting mistakes such as these –
mistakes that are evident
from the context and purpose of the
provision? In
Investors
Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society
,
[9]
Lord Hoffmann set out the position thus:
‘
The
“rule” that words should be given their “natural
and ordinary meaning” reflects the commonsense proposition
that
we do not easily accept that people have made linguistic mistakes,
particularly in formal documents. On the other hand, if
one would
nevertheless conclude from the background that something must have
gone wrong with the language, the law does not require
judges to
attribute to the parties an intention which they plainly could not
have had.’
[33]
The intention of the drafter was to record no more than that LEDA and
EAMI had concluded a shareholders
agreement in relation to their
shareholding in ASA. This accords with the common cause facts known
to all concerned at the time
– and avoids the absurdity that
would result from an interpretation that did not recognize that
something went wrong with
the drafting. When it is accepted, as it
must be, that the shareholders agreement and its amendment is the
subject of clause 17,
a sensible meaning consistent with that purpose
can also be given to the term ‘40% of stake in the right’
that, according
to LEDA, gave it an entitlement of some sort in DCM’s
mining right.
[34]
Once again, something went wrong with the drafting. The purpose of
clauses 3 and 5 of the shareholders
agreement was to create a
mechanism through which LEDA would identify an empowerment
shareholder so that ASA would comply with
the empowerment
requirements of the mining charter. LEDA and EAMI had agreed in the
shareholders agreement that when LEDA had identified
an empowerment
shareholder, it would dilute its shareholding by selling most of its
40 percent shareholding to that new shareholder.
LEDA owned 40
percent of the shares of ASA, not of DCM, and it had no interest of
any nature whatsoever in DCM’s mining right.
To the extent that
the drafter suggested that it did, they made a mistake. The result is
that, in the light of the context of clause
17, that nobody disputes,
as well as the purpose of clause 17, the reference to a ‘40%
stake in the right’ cannot logically
or sensibly mean a stake
in DCM’s mining right. Instead, it is a reference to LEDA’s
40 percent shareholding in ASA.
[35]
There is a further reason why this is so. I agree with Coppin J in
the high court that LEDA’s
interpretation of the term, vague as
it is, is untenable. It is evident that the Minister, in granting the
new order mining right
to DCM had no lawful authority to arbitrarily
grant a ‘stake’ in that mining right to anyone other than
the person
who applied for it. The interpretation contended for by
LEDA is premised on the Minister having acted beyond his powers and
thus
unlawfully – and on him having arbitrarily deprived DCM of
its property. That is neither a sensible or a businesslike
interpretation
and, as Coppin J concluded, LEDA’s ‘literal
interpretation would produce an illegal result’.
[36]
Once the patent errors that I have referred to have been recognized,
and accounted for against
the context and purpose of clause 17, it is
possible to make sense of clause 17. It does no more than record that
LEDA, as the
holder of 40 percent of the shares in ASA, was required
by the shareholders agreement to dilute its shareholding in favour of
an
empowerment shareholder, once it had identified that entity. It
failed to identify that entity. Because of this failure, clause
17
postulated another solution in order to meet the requirements of s
2(d)
and s
2(f)
of the MPRDA, albeit ‘upstream’
from DCM. The Minister required LEDA and EAMI to enter into a new
agreement in terms
of which LEDA was to transfer its entire 40
percent shareholding in ASA to SOMCO when the Minister told it to do
so. LEDA was given
nothing by clause 17, and the Minister had no
power to give it anything, let alone a ‘stake’ in someone
else’s
mining right. It had, in other words, no stake in DCM’s
mining right but only a 40 percent shareholding in ASA, which it
would divest itself of when the Minister gave it notice.
Conclusion
[37]
This interpretation of clause 17 puts paid to the appeal. LEDA was
never granted a 40 percent
stake – whatever that may mean –
in DCM’s mining right. That being so, it did not make a case
for a declarator
to this effect, for an interdict to prevent the BRPs
of DCM from selling DCM’s mining right to Cheetah without its
consent
or for any of the other relief that it claimed. The appeal
must fail.
[38]
I make the following order.
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
C Plasket
Judge of Appeal
Mbatha
JA (Petse DP concurring):
[39]
I have had the benefit of reading the judgment of my colleague,
Plasket JA, in this matter in
terms of which he proposes to dismiss
the appeal. Therefore, if what my colleague proposes prevails, the
order granted by the court
a quo dismissing the appellant’s
application with costs will stand. I regret that I am unable to agree
with the proposed
outcome and its underlying reasoning. The basis
upon which my view diverges from that of my colleague is elucidated
below.
[40]
I agree with my colleague that the most contentious issue before us
relates to the interpretation
of clause 17 of the DCM’s Mining
Right. The interpretation of clause 17 requires a careful
consideration of the scheme of
the MPRDA, its objectives considered
against the principles embodied in the Mining Charter, the Mining
Right itself and the Shareholders
Agreement.
[41]
In interpreting clause 17, the principles enunciated in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[10]
find application.
Endumeni
is
authority for the proposition that a holistic approach should be
uniformly applied to the interpretation of all documents, be
it a
contract or statute. Most importantly, as explained in
Endumeni
,
a sensible approach which avoids anomalies must be adopted. Equally,
in
Panamo
Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another v Nel N.O. and Others
,
[11]
this Court reiterated that this is the proper approach to adopt also
in relation to the interpretation of the requirements of a
policy. In
this regard the Mining Rights Charter, will require consideration.
[42]
Against the backdrop of these principles, I now turn to analyse the
legislative prescripts applicable
to the subject matter before us.
The MPRDA seeks to make provision for equitable access and
sustainable development of the nation’s
mineral and petroleum
resources and for related matters. Under s 3(1), all mineral and
petroleum resources are the common heritage
of the people of South
Africa, and the State is the custodian thereof for the benefit of all
South Africans. As such, the government
has the prerogative to grant,
issue, refuse, control, administer and manage any mining and
petroleum rights.
[43]
A significant feature of the MPRDA is that when Mining Rights are to
be granted, there must be
full compliance with the provisions of
MPRDA. In this regard, specific reference may be had to s 2, which
sets out the objects
of the MPRDA.
[12]
Amongst the other objects, the MPRDA in particular envisions the
following objectives:
‘
.
. . 2
(c)
promote
equitable access to the nation's mineral and petroleum resources to
all the people of South Africa;
(d)
substantially and meaningfully expand opportunities for historically
disadvantaged persons, including women and communities,
to enter into
and actively participate in the mineral and petroleum industries and
to benefit from the exploitation of the nation's
mineral and
petroleum resources;
(e)
. . .
(f)
promote employment and advance the social and economic welfare of all
South Africans.
. . .’
Due
deference should be given to the aforementioned objectives of the
MPRDA when interpreting the Mining Right, which is at the
core of
this appeal.
[44]
It bears emphasising that the MPRDA does not preclude foreign
companies from holding mineral
rights in South Africa. However, the
MPRDA contemplates that such foreign companies comply with the
prescripts of the Mining Charter
by having a BEE shareholder. This
would satisfy the noble objectives of the MPRDA.
[45]
The Mining Charter issued in terms of s 100 of the MPRDA provides for
the inclusion or participation
of the historically disadvantaged
masses of South Africans to participate in the mining sector. It has
been described as ‘a
binding regulatory instrument . . .
designed to ensure that the objects of the [Act] and the Constitution
are realised . . .’.
[13]
[46]
Thus, in interpreting the provisions of clause 17, it is necessary to
keep at the forefront of
our minds not only the mischief that the
MPRDA seeks to prevent but also what it seeks to accomplish. This
needs to be considered
against the backdrop that the State has a duty
to administer the national mineral resources for the benefit of all
South Africans.
In this regard, the interests of a minority
shareholder, either an empowerment party or BEE partner, need to be
protected. This
applies even in instances involving a conversion of
unused old order Mining Rights.
[47]
This then takes me to the DCM's position. As of 1978 DCM was the
holder of old-order unused mineral
rights. In terms of the MPRDA,
which came into effect in 2004, DCM had to apply for a conversion of
the unused old-order rights
to the new order Mining Rights. Although
the MPRDA gives security of tenure to the holder of such rights for
such a conversion,
it is not automatic. The conversion must be in
compliance with the provisions of the MPRDA. Section 23 regulates the
grant and
duration of Mining Rights. Section 23(3) provides that ‘the
Minister must . . . refuse to grant a Mining Right, if the
application
does not meet [all] the requirements referred to in ss
1’. For the purposes of this appeal, s 23(1)
(h)
requires
that ‘the granting of such right will further the objects
referred to in s 2
(d)
and
(f)
and in accordance with
the charter contemplated in s 100 and the prescribed social and
labour plan’. This means that due
cognisance should be taken of
the objects of the MPRDA, specifically the empowerment of
historically disadvantaged persons and
the advancement of the social
and economic welfare of all South Africans.
[48]
If the conclusion reached by my colleague stands, namely that that
the sole holder of the mineral
rights is DCM, that would entrench the
mischief sought to be prevented and defeat the whole purpose of the
MPRDA. Moreover, DCM
would not have been able to convert the old
unused rights without having had a BEE shareholder, or a stakeholder
as it would have
failed to meet the requirements of s 2(1) read with
s 23(3) of the MPRDA. To hold that DCM is the sole owner of the
Mining Right
simply because it was the owner of the old-order rights
that were later converted under the MPRDA would defeat the primary
objects
of the MPRDA. On this score it is as well good to remember
that a fundamental tenet of statutory interpretation is that
statutory
provisions must be interpreted purposively and contextually
consistently with the Constitution.
[14]
This is what s 39(2) of the Constitution decrees. Thus, when
interpreting any legislation for example, every court is enjoined
to
'promote the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights'.
[49]
The transitional arrangements relating to the conversion of unused
old-order rights, did not
preserve the status quo, which existed in
terms of the now repealed statutory regime. For the conversion to be
granted by the Minister,
the holders of such unused old-order rights
had to comply with the prescripts of the new legislation. Section 23
of the MPRDA empowers
the minister when granting a Mining Right, for
example, to impose such conditions as the exigencies of each case
require. In this
instance, the minister saw it fit to grant DCM a
Mining Right in substitution of its old-order right subject to
certain conditions.
One such condition which is central to this
appeal is embodied in clause 17 of the Mining Right granted to DCM.
[50]
Accepting that the conversion occurred under the provision of s 23,
DCM cannot be said to be
the sole ‘owner’ of the rights
in the context of the Company Law provisions. What the Constitutional
Court said in
Aquila
Steel (South African) (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Mineral Resources &
Others
[15]
bears repeating. The court there held that: ‘holders of [the]
unused old order [were only] accorded the privilege of exclusivity
[i.e] . . . the sole entitlement to apply for the new-order right
over the property to which the unused old-order right relates
. .
.’.
[16]
The
Constitutional Court further held that it gave such holders the ‘.
. . privilege to apply under the MPRDA for a new order
right . .
.’.
[17]
This did not
entail that the BEE or empowerment partners would serve only as
catalyst for the conversion of such rights and not
derive any benefit
in relation thereto.
[51]
Whilst I accept that as a general rule the shareholders of ASA were
only entitled to dividends,
I cannot see how that consideration can
assist the respondents for Item 7(4) of the schedule to the MPRDA
states that ‘[n]o
terms and conditions applicable to the
old-order Mining Right [shall] remain in force if they are contrary
to any provisions of
the Constitution or this Act’. It is
therefore a pre-requisite for a conversion of an old-order right to
the new-order Mining
Right, that the objectives of the MPRDA be
fulfilled. I pause to mention that the provisions of the MPRDA
supersede any common
law inconsistent with them. Section 4(1)
specifically provides that ‘when interpreting a provision of
this [MPRDA], any reasonable
interpretation which is consistent with
the objects of this [MPRDA] must be preferred [over] any other
interpretation which is
inconsistent with such objects’. The
MPRDA lends further assistance to the interpretation in Item 7(2)
which provides as
follows:
‘
7(2)
A holder of an old order Mining Right must lodge the right for the
conversion within the period referred to in [the] sub item
1. . .
together with:
.
. .(k) documentary proof of the manner in which, the holder of the
right will give effect the subject referred to subsection 2(d)
and
2(f).’
It
is clear to me that provisions such as these may not be waived as
they are designed for the protection of the historically
disadvantaged
persons.
[52]
In the light of the foregoing, recognition must therefore be given to
the appellant’s stake
as a 40% shareholder in ASA. The
respondent contended that the appellant is not a BEE Company. It is
common cause that on 11 December
2006 in Beijing EAMI and the
appellant entered into a Shareholders Agreement. This is the
agreement to which the Mining Right refers
in clause 17. The material
terms of that agreement were that EAMI would hold 60% of the shares
and the appellant 40% of the shares
in ASA. It was recorded that for
the purposes of the Shareholders Agreement a BEE partner was to be
procured. This would have enabled
ASA to sell a portion of the shares
to the BEE partner to comply with the Mining Charter. The minister
approved DCM's application
for the conversion of its old-order rights
into a Mining Right under the MPRDA subject, inter alia, to the
appellant acquiring
a 40% shareholding in DCM until such time as the
minister gave 'due notice' to the appellant to divert its '40% stake
at a later
stage to SOMCO'. As already indicated in paragraph 4 of
this judgment, the State is the custodian of all mineral and
petroleum
resources in South Africa and thus has the prerogative, as
in this case, to grant any mining and petroleum rights.
[53]
The failure by the appellant to transfer the 30% shareholding to a
BEE company has no impact
on the rights it holds, because it was
sanctioned by the minister and once a suitable BEE partner is found,
such a transfer will
take place. Without the benefit of the joint
venture between the appellant and EAMI, the conversion would not have
materialised.
On that score, DCM cannot claim to be the sole
beneficiary of the Mining Right. The registration of the right
without compliance
with s 2(d), was not absolute as it was made
subject to clause 17 of the Mining Right.
[54]
I now turn to examine the terms set out in clause 17 of the Mining
Right. It provides as follows:
‘
1.3.3.1.
DCM is subject to and bound by an “agreement or arrangement”
of 11 December 2006,
1.3.3.2.
DCM is obliged to conclude a new agreement with LEDA wherein LEDA
will hold a 40% “stake in the right without an
obligation to
dilute”.’
It
is common cause that the reference to the 11 December 2006 agreement
is to the agreement signed by EAMI and the appellant. The
subject of
the agreement being their shareholding in DCM. DCM is bound by the
agreement concluded on 11 December 2006. DCM also
failed to conclude
an agreement with the appellant whereby 40% of the stake in the
Mining Right without an obligation to dilute
would vest in the
appellant. It cannot be accepted that the minister intended that DCM
avoided its obligations as set out in clause
17. Therefore, the
contention by the respondents that the appellant has no rights in the
Mining Right is plainly unsustainable.
[55]
Cheetah’s position is unknown, save that it is a shelf company
incorporated on 15 March
2017. The identities of Cheetah's
shareholders remain shrouded in mystery. The indifferent dismissal of
this important factor by
the BRPs is difficult to understand, as it
goes against the objectives of the MPRDA and the Mining Charter. It,
in effect, translates
to an award of full Mining Rights in mineral
resources of the country to a Chinese company without due cognisance
of the dictates
of the MPRDA. Cheetah, cited as the eleventh
respondent, elected not to file any answering affidavit. Therefore,
it is unclear
whether or not it is compliant with all the necessary
requirements as set out in the objectives of the MPRDA. This is
tantamount
to selling the family silver by allowing foreign investors
to purchase the assets in DCM free from the obligation that the
minister
saw fit to impose in terms of clause 17 of the Mining Right.
The requirements of Item 7(2)
(k)
of Schedule II which require
that the holder of the unused old-order rights must lodge
‘documentary proof of the manner in
which, the holder of the
right will give effect to the object referred to in s 2(d) and (f)’
should equally apply to Cheetah
as the intended purchaser of such
rights.
[56]
At this juncture I consider that it would be helpful to set out the
relevant background to the
interpretation of clause 17. As at 14
November 2013, DCM’s application for conversion had not yet
been granted. The parties
to the shareholding agreement continued to
identify a suitable BEE shareholder. As of 15 January 2014 at a
meeting of the boards
of ASA and DCM, LEDA reported that it still
awaited the minister’s decision to dilute its shares in ASA.
However, instead
of the dilution of the LEDA’s shareholding in
ASA, the minister, on 20 March 2014, granted the Mining Right subject
to certain
conditions, and in particular that LEDA ‘will hold
40% of the stake in the right without an obligation to dilute’.
EAMI, a Chinese company was awarded a 60% interest. Since the
conversion of the old-order rights into a Mining Right, no one, in
particular DCM, challenged the terms and conditions of the Mining
Right imposed by the minister. The terms and conditions were
accepted
at the shareholders meeting held on 13 May 2014.The other condition
for the conversion, which was accepted by all the
parties, was that
the parties had to amend the shareholders' agreement to indicate that
LEDA would acquire a 40% stake in the Mining
Right 'without an
obligation to dilute' and that the 40% LEDA's shareholding would be
transferred to SOMCO at a time deemed appropriate
by the minister.
This had not yet materialised when, two years later, ASA was placed
under business rescue on 29 January 2016.
[57]
The change of attitude from the BRPs is inexplicable. The conditions
of the business rescue plan
as set out in clause 5.12.3 recognised
LEDA’s interest as follows: ‘Although the Company [ASA],
as DCM’s holding
company, is not subject to the provisions of
the DCM’s Mining Right or any related legislative provisions,
the shareholder
structure of the company is an incorporated and
express conditions of the Mining Rights of the DCM’. And they
further stated
that ‘Bid Assets’ contemplated for sale
excluded the DCM shares held by ASA. Furthermore, clause 21 of the
business
rescue plan provided: ‘[t]his B.R. Plan does not
envisage an effect on the shareholders of the Company’. It was
startling
that the recognition of LEDA's rights was subsequently
denied by the BRPs, as it was never contemplated that the disposal of
the
Mining Right would be without reference to the terms and
conditions of the Mining Right as granted to the shareholders. The
BRPs
are also acting contrary to the business rescue provision which
states that the primary goal is to facilitate the rehabilitation
of a
company in distress, and only when it is not possible for the company
to continue in existence can they sell the assets of
the company.
Furthermore, s 134(3) of the Companies Act, provides that ‘if
during a company’s business rescue proceedings,
the company
wishes to dispose of any property over which another person has any
security or title interest, the company must [inter
alia], obtain
prior consent of that other .person . . .’. In this case the
BRP’s simply deprived the appellant the
exercise of such a
right.
[58]
The appellant was criticised for having regard to the language used
in clause 17. I endorse what
this Court stated in
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[18]
when it emphasised that while the starting point remains the words of
the document, which are the only relevant medium through
which the
parties have expressed their contractual intentions, the process of
interpretation does not stop at the perceived literal
meaning of
those words, but considers them in the light of all the relevant and
admissible context, including the circumstances
in which the document
came into being. The former distinction between permissible
background and surrounding circumstances,
Bothma-Batho
Transport
tells
us, 'was never very clear and has since fallen away'. Interpretation
is no longer a process that occurs in stages but is “essentially
one unitary exercise”. It bears mentioning that clause 17 must
be interpreted by having due regard to the language used in
the light
of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax, in the context of each
other and the agreement as a whole, and its apparent
purpose so as to
give them a commercially sensible meaning that will promote the
objects of the MPRDA.
[19]
[59]
In
Shakawa
Hunting & Game Lodge (Pty) Ltd v Askari Adventures CC
[20]
,
concerning the interpretation of a written agreement, this Court held
that what the parties and their witnesses ex post facto
think and
believe regarding the meaning to be attached to the clauses of the
agreement, and thus what their intention was, is of
no assistance in
the exercise. In relation to the expression ‘the intention of
the parties’ it referred to what was
stated in
Endumeni
regarding
that expression, which is in line with what was expressed by this
Court six decades ago in
Worman
v Hughes & Others
[21]
namely: “it must be borne in mind that in an action on a
contract, the rule of interpretation is to ascertain, not what the
parties’ intention was, but what the language used in the
contract means . . .”. It therefore follows that, what the
respondent's post facto think clause 17 meant or what was intended
should be disregarded. Much emphasis was placed on what the
clause
was meant to mean.
[60]
The judgment of Plasket JA, with respect, fails to have due regard to
the context and circumstances
attended upon the coming into existence
of the shareholders’ agreement and most importantly the
language of clause 17 –
notwithstanding its imperfections –
embodied in the Mining Right. It is therefore highly unlikely that a
different scenario
would have been contemplated when clause 17 was
crafted. Whilst clause 17 is not a model of good draftmanship, there
can nevertheless
be no doubt as to what the minister sought to
achieve when he imposed the condition embodied in this clause. On its
proper construction,
in line with all the tenets of interpretation,
its manifest purpose becomes readily apparent, namely the appellant
is the holder
of a 40% interest in the Mining Right. In contrast, the
interpretation favoured by the high court and endorsed by my
colleague
has the effect that Cheetah will acquire the Mining Right
free from the strictures of s 2(
d
) and (
f
) of the
MPRDA.
[61]
Most recently, this Court in
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[22]
,
stated that the issue which has long troubled our courts is how to
marry the expansive approach to the interpretation adopted
in
Endumeni
with
the parol evidence rule, which remains an important principle and
part of the South African law. Referring to the
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
,
[23]
this Court stated that the Constitutional Court rejected the approach
fixated on the text’s plain meaning, but has in the
contrary
given due weight to extrinsic evidence as to context and purpose, in
determining the meaning of the contract. The Court
emphasised that
interpretation is a matter strictly for the court and not what
witnesses consider a contract to mean. The Court
expressed itself as
follows: ‘Most contracts, and particularly commercial
contracts, are constructed with a design in mind
and their architects
choose words and concepts to give effect to that design. For this
reason, interpretation begins with the text
and its structure. They
have a gravitational pull that is important. The proposition that
context is everything is not a licence
to contend for meanings
unmoored in the text and its structure. Rather, context and purpose
may be used to elucidate the text’.
[24]
This is exactly what was contended by the appellant in this case.
[62]
The rights of the appellant as confirmed by clause 17, which makes
reference to the provisions
of an earlier agreement concluded on 11
December 2006, are entrenched in that the parties are required to
conclude a new agreement
with LEDA, wherein LEDA will hold 40% of the
stake without an obligation to dilute. Furthermore, it contemplates
that at a later
stage LEDA will transfer its 40% stake to SOMCO upon
notice from the minister to do so. The agreement concluded on 6
December 2006
refers to the business to be conducted by ASA, being
the business of an investment holding company with a stake in DCM.
The designated
business is defined as follows: ‘means the
business carried by DCM’. Most significantly DCM is described
as a subsidiary
of ASA Metals.
[25]
[63]
DCM is bound by the provisions of the agreement dated 11 December
2006. DCM may be the holder
of the Mining Right, but this is subject
to the conditions set out in the Mining Rights itself and in
particular clause 17. The
Mining Right signed by DCM also provides
that DCM is bound by the shareholders’ agreement. As a result,
DCM cannot act contrary
to the provisions of clause 17. The appellant
also enjoys the protection afforded to it by s 134 of the Company’s
Act, which
requires that the BRPs obtain the requisite consent from
LEDA or any holder of a title interest, when transferring an
interest.
Lastly, DCM signed the conditions without any qualms. It
can therefore not lie in the mouth of DCM, which has never challenged
the power of the minister to incorporate clause 17 as one of the
conditions for the grant of the Mining Right, to now contend that
the
minister exceeded his statutory powers when he imposed the condition
embodied in clause 17. Consequently, in the context of
the facts of
this case this Court is, in my view, enjoined to give a sensible and
businesslike meaning to clause 17 of the Mining
Right in the light of
the objects of the MPRDA.
[64]
The decision cited in the judgment of my colleague, confirming that
ownership of the assets of
a company vest in the company itself and
not its shareholders, does not avail the respondents in this matter.
[65]
Accordingly, I would uphold the appeal with costs, set aside the
order of the high court substituting
it with an order granting
appropriate relief to the appellant.
YT
Mbatha
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For the
appellant:
P L Carstensen SC, D M Smith and P J Daniell
Instructed
by:
Tshisevhe Gwina Ratshimbilani Inc, Johannesburg
McIntyre Van der Post,
Bloemfontein
For the first to sixth
respondents: A J Eyles SC and R
Ismail
Instructed
by:
Hogan Lovells Johannesburg Inc, Johannesburg
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the eleventh
respondent:
G B Rome SC and A Milovanovic-Bitter
Instructed
by:
Thomson Wilks, Johannesburg
Honey Attorneys Inc,
Bloemfontein
[1]
An
old order mining right is defined in item 1 of Schedule II of the
MPRDA as ‘any mining lease, mynpachten, consent to
mine,
permission to mine, claim licence, mining authorisation or right
listed in Table 2 to this Schedule in force immediately
before the
date on which this Act took effect and in respect of which mining
operations are being conducted’.
[2]
Item
7(1).
[3]
The
term ‘historically disadvantaged person’ is defined in s
1 of the MPRDA. It means:
‘
(a)
any person, category of persons or community, disadvantaged by
unfair discrimination
before the Constitution took effect;
(b)
any association, a majority of whose members are
persons contemplated in paragraph
(a)
;
(c)
a juristic person, other than an association,
which-
(i)
is managed and controlled by a person contemplated in paragraph
(a)
and that the persons collectively or as a group own and control a
majority of the issued share capital or members' interest,
and are
able to control the majority of the members' vote; or
(ii)
is a subsidiary, as defined in section 1
(e)
of the Companies
Act, 1973, as a juristic person who is a historically disadvantaged
person by virtue of the provisions of paragraph
(c)
(i).’
[4]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18. See too
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2021] ZASCA 99
;
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA) para 25.
[5]
Para
25.
[6]
Princess
Estate and Gold Mining Co Ltd v Registrar of Mining Titles
1911
TPD 1066
at 1079-1080.
[7]
Clicks
Group Ltd and Others v Independent Community Pharmacy Association
and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 167
;
[2022] 1 All SA 297
(SCA) paras 23-26 and 36-37.
[8]
It
suffices to mention but two:
Dadoo
Ltd and Others v Krugersdorp Municipal Council
1920 AD 530
at 550-551; and
The
Shipping Corporation of India Ltd v Evdomon Corporation and Another
[1993] ZASCA 167
;
1994 (1) SA 550
(A) at 565I-566H.
[9]
Investors
Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society
[1997]
UKHL 28
;
[1998] 1 All ER 98
(HL) at 115c-d. See too
Chartbrook
Ltd v Persimmon Houses Ltd and Another
[2009] UKHL 38
;
[2009] 3 All ER 677
(HL) paras 14-15. Both cases are
referred to with apparent approval in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(note 4) para 25 fn 38.
[10]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) (
Endumeni
).
[11]
Panamo
Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another v Nel N.O. and Others
[2015] ZASCA 76
; 2015(5) SA 63(SCA);
[2015] All SA 274
(SCA) para
27.
[12]
‘
The
objects of this Act are to –
(a)
recognise the internationally accepted right of the State to
exercise sovereignty over all the mineral and petroleum resources
within the Republic;
(b)
give effect to the principle of the State's custodianship of the
nation's mineral and petroleum resources;
(c)
promote equitable access to the nation's mineral and petroleum
resources to all the people of South Africa;
(d)
substantially and meaningfully expand opportunities for historically
disadvantaged persons, including women and communities,
to enter
into and actively participate in the mineral and petroleum
industries and to benefit from the exploitation of the nation's
mineral and petroleum resources; (Section 2(d) substituted by
section 2 of Act 49 of 2008 with effect from 7 June 2013).
(e)
promote economic growth and mineral and petroleum resources
development in the Republic, particularly development of downstream
industries through provision of feedstock, and development of mining
and petroleum inputs industries; (Section 2(e) substituted
by
section 2 of Act 49 of 2008 with effect from 7 June 2013);
(f)
promote employment and advance the social and economic welfare of
all South Africans; (g) provide for security of tenure in
respect of
prospecting, exploration, mining and production operations; (h) give
effect to section 24 of the Constitution by ensuring
that the
nation's mineral and petroleum resources are developed in an orderly
and ecologically sustainable manner while promoting
justifiable
social and economic development; and
(i)
ensure that holders of mining and production rights contribute
towards the socio-economic development of the areas in which
they
are operating.’
[13]
See
Chamber
of Mines of South Africa v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others
[2018] ZAGPPHC 8;
[2018] 2 All SA 391
(GP);
2018 (4) SA 581
(GP)
para 181.
[14]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
[2014] ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC) para
28.
[15]
Aquila
Steel (S Africa) (Pty) Limited v Minister of Mineral Resources and
Others
[2019]
ZACC 5; 2019 (4) BCLR 429 (CC); 2019 (3) SA 621 (CC).
[16]
Ibid
para 68.
[17]
Ibid
para 72.
[18]
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2013] ZASCA 176
;
[2014] 1 All SA 517
(SCA);
2014 (2) SA 494
(SCA)
para 12 (
Bothma-Batho
Transport
).
[19]
Roazar
CC v Falls Supermarket CC
[2017] ZASCA 166
;
[2018] 1 All SA 438
(SCA);
2018 (3) SA 76
(SCA)
para 9.
[20]
Shakawa
Hunting & Game Lodge (Pty) Ltd v Askari Adventures CC
[2015] ZASCA 62
(17 April 2015) para 11.
[21]
Worman
v Hughes & Others
[21]
1948
(3) SA 495
(A) at 505.
[22]
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 39.
[23]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[2021] ZACC 13; 2021 (8) BCLR 807 (CC).
[24]
Ibid
para 51.
[25]
See
also para 12 of Plasket JA judgment.
sino noindex
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Moroka v Premier of the Free State Province and Others (295/20) [2022] ZASCA 34 (31 March 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 34Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Lategan and Another v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Another (314/2022) [2024] ZASCA 74; 2024 (2) SACR 227 (SCA) (10 May 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 74Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Adendorff N O and Another v Kubheka and Another (463/2020) [2022] ZASCA 29 (24 March 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 29Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Kgaphola and Another (795/2023) [2025] ZASCA 66; 2026 (1) SA 84 (SCA) (23 May 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 66Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar