Case Law[2022] ZASCA 115South Africa
Leysath v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control (770/2021) [2022] ZASCA 115 (28 July 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
28 July 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Claim for reimbursement in terms of s 26 of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 – appellant alleging that deposits paid by clients to instructing attorneys’ firm as cover for counsel’s fees constitute an entrustment in terms of s 26 – alleged payment disputed - onus on claimant to establish that money had been entrusted on his behalf to the attorney –onus not discharged – appeal dismissed with costs.
Judgment
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## Leysath v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control (770/2021) [2022] ZASCA 115 (28 July 2022)
Leysath v Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control (770/2021) [2022] ZASCA 115 (28 July 2022)
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sino date 28 July 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case No: 770/2021
In
the matter between:
LINDON
CLIFFORD LEYSATH
APPELLANT
and
LEGAL
PRACTITIONERS’ FIDELITY FUND
BOARD
OF CONTROL
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Leysath
v Legal Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund Board of Control
(770/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 115
(28 July
2022)
Coram:
PETSE DP, ZONDI and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and SMITH
and SAVAGE AJJA
Heard:
31 May 2022
Delivered:
28 July 2022
Summary:
Claim for reimbursement in terms of s
26 of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 – appellant alleging that
deposits paid by clients
to instructing attorneys’ firm as
cover for counsel’s fees constitute an entrustment in terms of
s 26 – alleged
payment disputed - onus on claimant to establish
that money had been entrusted on his behalf to the attorney –onus
not discharged
– appeal dismissed with costs.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Van Nieuwenhuizen AJ, sitting as court of first
instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Smith
AJA (Petse DP, Zondi and Mabindla- Boqwana JJA and Savage AJA
concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment of the Gauteng High Court,
Pretoria (the high
court), dismissing the appellant’s, Mr L C
Leysath’s, application for an order compelling the respondent,
the Legal
Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund Board of Control, to
reimburse him a sum of R472 666, in terms of s 26
(a)
of
the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 (the Attorneys Act).
[2]
The appellant, a practising advocate, contended that the money was
held in trust on
his behalf by the attorneys’ firm, M F Martins
Costa Attorneys (Costa Attorneys), as cover for his fees and had been
misappropriated
by the firm. The high court granted leave to appeal
to this Court on the ground that
s 17(1)
(a)
(ii) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
may be applicable since the appellant
contended that the high court had impermissibly overturned binding
legal precedent.
[3]
Although the Attorneys Act was repealed by the Legal Practice Act 28
of 2014 (the
Legal Practice Act), which
came into effect on 1
November 2018, the latter statute has no retroactive application.
Because the facts which gave rise to the
appellant’s claim
occurred before 1 November 2018, the matter must be decided in terms
of the provisions of the Attorneys
Act.
[4]
The respondent is the successor in title of the Attorneys Fidelity
Fund Board of Control,
which ceased to exist on 1 November 2018. It
was established in terms of
s 61
of the
Legal Practice Act and
is
responsible for the management and administration of the Legal
Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund.
The
facts
[5]
On 17 July 2018, the appellant lodged his claim with the respondent.
After extensive
correspondence between the parties, the respondent
repudiated the claim on the grounds that the appellant had failed to
establish
that the funds had been entrusted to Costa Attorneys on his
behalf and that his claim consequently did not fall within the ambit
of s 26
(a)
of the Attorneys Act.
[6]
The appellant’s claim comprised 51 of unpaid tax invoices that
he had allegedly
rendered to Costa Attorneys in respect of
professional services performed by him for various clients during
February to June 2018.
He claimed that clients had paid funds to
Costa Attorneys as cover for his fees and that those funds had been
entrusted to the
latter on his behalf, as contemplated by s 26
(a)
.
He further alleged that the managing partner, Mr Manuel Fernando
Martins Costa (Mr Costa), misappropriated the monies, causing
him to
suffer pecuniary loss in the claimed sum.
[7]
Mr Costa absconded after the Legal Practice Council (the Council)
established that
there was a deficit exceeding R30 million in the
firm’s trust account. The appellant first became aware of the
misappropriation
of the funds by Mr Costa on 9 July 2018, when Mr
Wayne Teich, an attorney employed by Mr Costa told him about it. Mr
Costa’s
estate has since been sequestrated.
[8]
The appellant claims that he has had a long professional relationship
with Costa Attorneys,
spanning over 10 years. Throughout this period,
his accounts were paid within 97 days. He was aware of the firm’s
policy
to the effect that it would only engage counsel once a client
had paid sufficient funds into its trust account. He was present on
several occasions when clients were advised to provide cover for
counsel’s fees.
[9]
In support of this assertion, he relied on the confirmatory affidavit
of Ms Glynis
Wall, who was, at all material times, employed by Costa
Attorneys as Mr Costa’s personal assistant. Although Ms Wall
was
able to confirm that she had on many occasions contacted clients
prior to the appellant’s engagement to secure funds, she
could
not verify how much was paid prior to the appellant’s
engagement because she did not have direct access to Costa Attorneys’
accounts and systems, ‘such being tightly controlled by [Mr
Costa]’.
[10]
The appellant attached, to his founding affidavit, the tax invoices
on which he had based his
claim. He conceded that in seven of those
matters, there was no proof that clients had paid the claimed amounts
to Costa Attorneys,
and that he was consequently not entitled to
reimbursement in respect thereof. In respect of one of the matters,
he asserted that
a reduced amount was paid. As a result, his initial
claim of some R537 475 was reduced to R472 666.
[11]
In respect of the rest of the invoices, he asserted that in each of
those matters clients had
informed him that they had made payments to
Costa Attorneys as cover for his fees. He also attached copies of
proof of payments
by clients and provided the respondent with the
respective clients’ cellular phone numbers. He explained that
he was constrained
to follow that route since he was unsuccessful in
his attempts to obtain the relevant information from the Council.
[12]
The appellant also relied on an affidavit that Mr Teich had deposed
to, in order to assist the
Council with the investigation into the
affairs of Costa Attorneys. The affidavit was neither made in support
of the appellant’s
founding affidavit nor was it a confirmatory
affidavit. In any event, Mr Tiech stated that he worked mostly on
conveyancing matters
and had no access to any of the firm’s
records or books of account. The affidavit accordingly does not
support either the
appellant’s or Ms Wall’s assertions
regarding the firm’s briefing policy, nor does it shed any
light on monies
that clients paid as cover for counsels’ fees.
It appears that the affidavit was primarily intended to assist the
Council
in establishing the extent of the embezzlement by Mr Costa.
[13]
In addition, the appellant relied on affidavits filed by Mr Gary
Abkin and Mr Richard Vaz behalf
of their respective companies, who
were both clients of Costa Attorneys. Mr Abkin made his affidavit in
support of a charge of
theft against Mr Costa, lodged on behalf of
Norman and Gary Abkin Dunswart Properties (Pty) Ltd (the company). He
stated that the
company had paid R13 800 to Costa Attorneys as
cover for the appellant’s fees and a further R23 000 as
cover for
his fees in respect of drafting of heads of argument, as
well as cover for Costas Attorneys’ own fees. Mr Abkin also
mentioned
that the company had paid R240 000 to Costa Attorneys
with instructions to hold the money in trust for attorneys’ and
counsel’s fees. However, no mention is made of the appellant in
regard to this payment.
[14]
Mr Abkin alleged that the company entrusted the sum of R276 800
to Costa Attorneys and that
the company had suffered pecuniary loss
because of Mr Costa’s misappropriation of the funds. The
company accordingly sought
reimbursement of that amount.
[15]
In his affidavit, Mr Vaz, in his capacity as a director of Annsden
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd,
stated that during May 2018 he had
caused a sum of R100 000 to be transferred from his company to
Costa Attorneys’ trust
account. Mr Vaz stated that these funds
were for the ‘specific and sole purpose of payment of the
invoices of the two advocates’,
namely the appellant and Mr
Ralph Kujawa, ‘whose services had been utilised in litigation
against a third party’. He
stated, further that he had
expressly made it known to Mr Costa that the payment was for that
purpose only. The money was therefore
not paid as cover for counsels’
fees, but to settle the appellant’s and Mr Kujawa’s
accounts in respect of services
rendered by them. However, Mr Vaz did
not specify what amount his company paid in respect of the
appellant’s fees and claimed
that it was his company that
suffered the pecuniary loss.
The
findings of the high court
[16]
Despite the respondent’s unequivocal assertion that the
appellant had failed to establish
that clients paid deposits to Costa
Attorneys as cover for his fees, the high court, nevertheless,
decided the matter based on
that assumption. It furthermore assumed
that Mr Costa had committed theft in the course of his practice. The
high court then embarked
on an extensive discussion regarding the
question whether monies paid by a client to a practising attorney as
cover for counsel’s
fees in respect of services to be rendered,
constituted an entrustment as envisaged in s 26.
[17]
It found that the monies deposited by clients to ensure that there
were sufficient funds available
to pay counsel’s fees were
‘entrusted’ to Costa Attorneys as envisaged by s 26.
However, it reasoned that since
the appellant did not deposit the
money ‘it can never be said that the money entrusted as
deposits by Costa’s clients
was so entrusted on the
[appellant’s] behalf’. It reasoned that:
‘
It
may well be that its purpose was to ensure that counsel’s fees
were covered, but it would be farfetched to suggest that
deposits
were paid with the sole purpose only of covering counsel’s fees
as a disbursement and not other disbursements, such
as sheriff’s
costs, correspondent’s fees, messenger’s fees and the
like, (including at least part of the attorney’s
own initial
fees)’.
[18]
The high court concluded that an advocate’s claim for
outstanding fees lies against the
attorney and not the client. If the
attorney’s estate was sequestrated, the claim lay against his
or her insolvent estate.
It followed, the court held, that the
appellant did not suffer pecuniary loss due to the alleged theft of
any monies paid by clients
to Costa Attorneys. The appellant’s
loss, as indicated, arises due to Mr Costa’s breach of the
agreement between him
and the appellant.
The
appellant’s submissions
[19]
A substantial portion of the appellant’s heads of argument
focused on the criticism that
the high court misconstrued the dispute
between the parties. He submitted that the high court therefore
decided the matter on a
wrong basis and failed to deal with the real
dispute between the parties. In this regard, the appellant contended
that the respondent
had accepted that the monies paid by clients to
Costa Attorneys as cover for his fees constituted entrustments as
envisaged by
s 26. The only issue, according to him, that was still
alive before the high court was the respondent’s contention
that the
appellant had failed to prove that clients had in fact paid
the monies to Costa Attorneys as cover for services rendered by him.
[20]
In any event, so contended the appellant, in pronouncing on the issue
of entrustment, the high
court ignored the fact that there was a
tripartite contractual relationship between counsel, client and the
attorney, and erroneously
found that there existed a debtor and
creditor relationship between him and the instructing attorney. In
doing so, the high court
impermissibly overturned binding precedent
that established that a client is contractually liable for counsel’s
fees, and
that there is no ‘hardened rule’ that an
attorney ‘stands in’ for counsel’s fees. Those
cases confirmed
that funds held by an attorney in respect of
counsel’s fees are in not held by the attorney as his or her
own funds or in
respect of services to be rendered by him or her, and
they are held on behalf of counsel.
[1]
[21]
In addition, the appellant submitted that the high court was wrong in
refusing to follow the
dictum in
Serrurier
and Another v Korzia and Another,
[2]
to the effect that in the event of a client paying an attorney for
counsel’s fees and the attorney failing to pay counsel,
‘the
fidelity fund would in all probability pay the counsel’.
[22]
Regarding the adequacy of the proof of payments into Costa Attorneys’
trust account, the
appellant contended that the respondent had, in
correspondence between the parties, set out the frame of reference
and parameters
in which information in support of the claim was to be
relayed to it. In terms of that frame of reference, the respondent
indicated
that it required generic information and supporting
documents, and to the extent that they were insufficient, it would
request
further information. The respondent did not challenge the
supporting documents that he submitted to it nor did it request any
further
information or documents. Therefore, the respondent was
estopped from challenging the adequacy of the evidence that the
appellant
had submitted in support of his claims. Consequently, the
respondent impermissibly raised that issue for the first time in its
answering affidavit, so the argument went.
Discussion
[23]
Section 26
(a)
of the Attorneys Act reads as follows:
‘
Subject
to the provisions of this Act, the fund shall be applied for the
purpose of reimbursing persons who may suffer pecuniary
loss as a
result of –
(a)
theft committed by a practising practitioner, his
candidate attorney or his employee, of any money or other property
entrusted by
or on behalf of such persons to him or to his candidate
attorney or employee in the course of his practice or while acting as
executor
or administrator in the estate of a deceased person or as a
trustee in an insolvent estate or in any other similar capacity.’
[24]
The appellant was thus required to prove that: (a) he had suffered
pecuniary loss; (b) by reason
of theft committed by Mr Costa; (c) of
money entrusted by or on the appellant’s behalf; (d) in the
course of Mr Costa’s
practice.
[25]
In
Industrial
and Commercial Factors (Pty) Ltd v The Attorneys’ Fidelity Fund
Board of Control (Industrial and Commercial Factors),
[3]
this Court held that not all monies paid into an attorney’s
trust account constitute an entrustment as envisaged by s 26.
The
term is also not limited to cases where the money or property was
subject to a ‘trust’ in the legal technical sense
of the
word. The court further explained that ‘[i]f money is simply
handed over to an attorney by a debtor who thereby wished
to
discharge a debt, and the attorney has a mandate to receive it on
behalf of the creditor, it may be difficult to establish an
entrustment’.
[26]
The court cited with approval, the dictum in
British
Kaffrarian Savings Bank Society v Attorneys, Notaries and
conveyancers Fidelity Gaurentee Fund Board of Control,
[4]
to the effect that entrustment comprises two elements namely: ‘(a)
to place in the possession of something, (b) subject to
a trust. As
to the latter element, this connotes that the person entrusted is
bound to deal with the property or money concerned
for the benefit of
others . . .’.
[27]
In the context of the factual matrix of this case, it is logical that
the starting point must
be whether the appellant has established, on
a balance of probabilities, that clients paid money to Costa
Attorneys as cover for
his fees. This was also the main ground on
which the respondent had joined issue with the appellant in its
answering affidavit.
The respondent stated, upfront, that its main
reason for rejecting the appellant’s claim was that he was
unable to discharge
the onus of proving that the funds were entrusted
to Costa Attorneys on his behalf.
[28]
The appellant has correctly submitted that the high court did not
have any grounds for deciding
the matter on the assumption that the
funds were paid by Costa Attorneys’ clients as cover for his
fees, since the respondent
unambiguously denied that assertion in its
answering affidavit. Moreover, as I have mentioned earlier, where a
client’s payment
to an attorney has been put in issue, the
court must, as a first step, resolve that dispute. It is only once
that issue has been
determined that it becomes necessary to consider
the other requirements mentioned in s 26, namely, the issues of
entrustment and
theft of the funds. The appellant’s assertion
that the respondent conceded the issue of entrustment is misplaced.
The appellant’s
submissions in this regard were not factual in
nature, but were legal conclusions without a factual foundation. In
any event, the
question as to whether the payments to Costa Attorneys
constituted entrustments as contemplated by s 26 is a legal issue
which
must be determined by this Court – if and when it becomes
necessary – and any concessions made by the respondent in
this
regard are of no moment.
[29]
Before I turn to consider the adequacy of the proof submitted by the
appellant in support of
his claims, it is necessary to emphasise that
s 26 provides for reimbursement in respect of pecuniary loss suffered
by victims
of theft by an attorney in the course of his or her
practice. It was therefore incumbent on the appellant to prove, on a
balance
of probabilities, the exact amounts that clients had paid to
Costa Attorneys in respect of each of the matters in which he had
rendered tax invoices and had sought reimbursement. In my view, this
Court is not bound by an agreement between the respondent and
the
appellant that has the effect of relieving the latter of the
obligation to prove the factors mentioned in s 26 on a balance
of
probabilities.
[30]
As I have indicated earlier, the appellant relies only on hearsay
evidence in support of his
assertion that clients paid money to Costa
Attorneys as cover for his fees. In this regard, he stated that the
relevant clients
had informed him that they made payments to Costa
Attorneys in respect of his fees. However, he did not obtain
confirmatory affidavits
from them, but merely provided the respondent
with their contact details, expecting the latter to verify his
claims.
[31]
In this regard, the affidavits of Ms Wall, or Messrs Abkin, Tiech and
Vaz were of no assistance
to the appellant. Ms Wall merely confirmed
that Costa Attorneys had a policy to brief counsel upon receipt of
funds by clients.
It is common cause, however, that she was unable to
shed any light on actual payments made by clients in respect of the
appellant’s
fees. In any event, the existence of such a policy
does not take the matter any further in the absence of sufficient
proof that
the relevant clients actually paid money to Costa
Attorneys as cover for the appellant’s fees.
[32]
Mr Abkin’s affidavit also did not shed any light on specific
amounts paid in anticipation
of services to be rendered by the
appellant. Instead, it concentrated on proving pecuniary loss
suffered by his company.
[33]
Mr Tiech’s affidavit also does not refer to any specific
amounts paid to Costa Attorneys
on behalf of the appellant. It was
only proffered to establish that Mr Costa had misappropriated trust
funds.
[34]
The appellant submitted that it would be in the interests of justice
to admit the hearsay evidence.
He argued that in considering whether
to admit the hearsay evidence in terms of s 3 of the Law of Evidence
Amendment Act 45 of
1988 (Law of Evidence Amendment Act)
[5]
,
the court must have regard to the following facts. First, he is a
practising advocate and since he has conceded claims in respect
of
which he was unable to provide proof, there is no reason why the
respondent should doubt the probity of his claims. Second,
the
respondent has chosen the frame of reference in respect of the
evidence it required in support of the claims. Third, he did
not have
access to Costa Attorneys’ trust account records and it would
have been relatively easy for the respondent to access
Costa
Attorney’s books of account in order to confirm whether the
payments were made. And last, he has provided the respondent
with the
contact details of the respective clients, placing it in a position
to confirm the veracity of his assertions.
Findings
and order
[35]
The appellant's recourse to s 3 of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act
is misguided. As a practicing
advocate, he could not have been
oblivious to the fact that references in his affidavits to what he
had been told by Mr Costa's
clients constituted inadmissible
hearsay evidence. Thus, it behoved him to introduce such evidence
properly, if he sought to rely
on it, assuming that such an avenue
was open to him. He apparently knew of the identities of the persons
who, according to him,
provided him with this information.
[36]
In my view, the established facts militate against the admission of
the hearsay evidence. As
I have mentioned earlier, the purpose of s
26 is to reimburse victims of theft by a practising attorney in
respect of specific
amounts entrusted to the attorney. The first
hurdle a claimant relying on the section must therefore overcome is
to prove that
the monies were in fact paid to an attorney on his or
her behalf. Since attorneys are by law required to keep proper books
of account
and records of trust ledgers, this is usually not a
difficult hurdle for a claimant to surmount. This is so because the
relevant
receipt or trust ledger would invariably establish whether
the funds were entrusted to the attorney. In a case such as this,
where
the claimant does not rely on the attorney’s trust
records but on the say-so of a client, the latter must file a
confirmatory
affidavit setting out the relevant information that
would enable the respondent to determine whether the money had indeed
been
entrusted to the attorney. The appellant has failed to produce
any such evidence.
[37]
He has instead relied on bald statements by clients to the effect
that they had paid money to
Costa Attorneys in respect of his and the
attorneys’ fees. However, he provided no details of the exact
amounts that have
allegedly been entrusted to Costa Attorneys on his
behalf. While the appellant lamented about the ‘arduous’
task he
was compelled to undertake in order to obtain the relevant
information from clients, he did not explain why he was unable to
procure
supporting affidavits from the latter.
[38]
The further difficulty facing the appellant is that the hearsay
evidence is in any event of doubtful
probative value. For the reasons
that I have set out above, I am of the view that even if the hearsay
evidence were to be admitted,
it would not assist the appellant in
proving that clients paid specified sums of money to Costa Attorneys
as cover for his fees.
[39]
The appellant also complained that he was hamstrung by the Council’s
unreasonable refusal
to allow him access to the relevant records.
However, even if the Council has unfairly refused him access to
documents that he
required to sustain his claim, that does not
necessarily entitle him to reimbursement in terms of s 26. At best,
he would be entitled
to an order compelling production of the
relevant documents in such circumstances.
[40]
Apart from all else, the respondent would be seriously prejudiced if
the hearsay evidence were
allowed. The respondent is a statutory
body, whose powers to reimburse victims of theft by practising
attorneys are carefully circumscribed
by s 26. The section requires
the respondent to reimburse affected persons in respect of specific
amounts entrusted to an attorney
and stolen by him or her in the
course of practice. If the hearsay evidence were allowed, it would
put undue pressure on the respondent
to consider general allegations
relating to unspecified amounts paid to and misappropriated by Mr
Costa. I am therefore of the
view that it would not be in the
interests of justice to allow the hearsay evidence.
[41]
This finding effectively means that the appellant has failed to
overcome the first hurdle in
order to place himself within the
purview of s 26, namely to establish that clients entrusted specified
sums of money to Costa
Attorneys as cover for his fees. In the light
of this finding, it is not necessary for us to decide whether any of
the payments
constituted entrustments as envisaged by s 26 or whether
Mr Costa has misappropriated the funds in the course of his practice.
The appeal must therefore fail.
[42]
Regarding the issue of costs, the appellant contended that the
principle enunciated in
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources and Others
[6]
is applicable since the matter required consideration of an important
issue of public interest, namely the legal nature of the
relationship
between attorneys, advocates and clients. He submitted that the court
should accordingly make no order as to costs
if the appeal fails. I
disagree. The appellant launched the proceedings to compel
reimbursement of pecuniary loss that he allegedly
suffered in respect
of his unpaid tax invoices. He was thus clearly pursuing a personal
financial interest. The matter accordingly
does not raise any issues
that are constitutional in nature; neither does it have any impact on
the public interest.
[7]
Costs must therefore follow the result.
[43]
In the result, I make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
J
E SMITH
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant:
L C Leysath
Instructed
by:
Gishen-Gilchrist Inc, Benoni
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent: G Oliver
Instructed
by:
Brendan Muller Inc, Cape Town
Van Der Merwe &
Sorour Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
See
Bertelsmann
v Per
1996
(2) SA 375
(T), at 381E-F;
Minister
of Finance and Another v Law Society, Transvaal
[1991] ZASCA 88
;
1991 (4) SA 544
(A) at 556I – 557B.
[2]
Serrurier
and Another v Korzia and Another
2010
(3) SA 166
(W) para 17.
[3]
Industrial
and Commercial Factors (Pty) Ltd v The Attorneys’ Fidelity
Fund Board of Control
1997
(1) SA (A) 136 at 143-144.
[4]
British
Kaffrarian Savings Bank Society v Attorneys, Notaries and
Conveyancers Fidelity Gaurentee Fund Board of Control
[1978]
3 All SA 522 (E); 1978 (3) SA 242 (E).
[5]
In
terms of s 3 of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act, a court has
discretion to allow hearsay evidence if it is of the opinion
that
such evidence should be admitted in the interests of justice, having
regard to the following factors:
(a)
the nature of the proceedings;
(b)
the nature of the evidence;
(c)
the purpose for which the evidence is tendered;
(d)
the probative value of the evidence;
(e)
the reason why the evidence is not given by the person upon whose
credibility the probative value of such evidence depend;
(f)
any prejudice to a party which the admission of such evidence might
entail; and
(g)
any other factor which should, in the opinion of the court, be taken
into account.
[6]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
[2009]
ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC); 2009 (10) BCLR 1014 (CC).
[7]
Mkhatshwa
and Others v Mkhatshwa and Another
[2021]
ZACC 15.
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[2025] ZASCA 121Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd and Others v United Democratic Movement and Another (1308/2023) [2025] ZASCA 29 (28 March 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 29Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Strategic Partners Group (Pty) Ltd and Others v The Liquidators of Ilima Group (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) and Others (1291/2021) [2023] ZASCA 27; [2023] 2 All SA 658 (SCA) (24 March 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 27Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar