Case Law[2022] ZASCA 129South Africa
N'Wandlamharhi Communal Property Association and Another v Westcott and Others (401/2021) [2022] ZASCA 129 (3 October 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
3 October 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Property – servitude – rights of access to and occupation of immovable properties – rights constitute subtraction from dominium of land – no intention on part of landowners granting rights to bind successors in title – no rights to registration of servitudes created.
Judgment
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## N'Wandlamharhi Communal Property Association and Another v Westcott and Others (401/2021) [2022] ZASCA 129 (3 October 2022)
N'Wandlamharhi Communal Property Association and Another v Westcott and Others (401/2021) [2022] ZASCA 129 (3 October 2022)
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sino date 3 October 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 401/2021
In
the matter between:
N’WANDLAMHARHI
COMMUNAL
PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
FIRST APPELLANT
MALAMALA
GAME RESERVE (PTY) LTD
SECOND APPELLANT
and
HELEN
LYNNE
WESTCOTT
FIRST RESPONDENT
CAROLINE
CLARE CORMACK
SECOND RESPONDENT
RODRICK
ANTON BEAUMONT
THIRD RESPONDENT
MICHAEL
HEMINGFORD BEAUMONT
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
N’Wandlamharhi
Communal Property Association and Another v Westcott and Others
(401/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 129
(3 October 2022)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE and MOTHLE JJA and MUSI, KGOELE and WEINER AJJA
Heard
:
22 August 2022
Delivered
:
3 October 2022
Summary:
Property – servitude – rights of access to and
occupation of immovable properties – rights constitute
subtraction
from dominium of land – no intention on part of
landowners granting rights to bind successors in title – no
rights
to registration of servitudes created.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court, Mbombela,
(Mashile J, Mphahlele J and Greyling Coetzer AJ concurring), sitting
as court of
appeal:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with an order
dismissing
the appeal with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Van
der Merwe JA (Mothle JA and Musi, Kgoele and Weiner AJJA concurring)
[1]
The first appellant, the N’Wandlamharhi Communal Property
Association, is the
registered owner of a number of immovable
properties that comprise the MalaMala Private Game Reserve (MalaMala)
in Mpumalanga.
These properties include portion 1 of Charleston 378
KU (Charleston South) and the remaining extent of Charleston 378 KU
(Charleston
North). The second appellant, MalaMala Game Reserve (Pty)
Ltd, operates MalaMala in terms of a lease agreement with the first
appellant.
The first respondent, Ms Helen Lynne Westcott, and the
second respondent, Ms Caroline Clare Cormack, are sisters. The third
respondent,
Mr Rodrick Anton Beaumont, and the fourth respondent, Mr
Michael Hemingford Beaumont, are brothers and first cousins of the
first
and second respondents. Broadly stated, the question in the
appeal is whether the respondents have rights of access to and
occupation
of Charleston South and Charleston North (collectively the
Charleston properties) that are enforceable against the appellants.
The question must be answered in the light of the background that
follows.
Background
[2]
The original farm Charleston belonged to Mr Frans Unger, the maternal
grandfather
of the respondents. During 1958 the original farm was
subdivided into two equal portions, each approximately 1801 hectares
in extent,
thereby constituting the Charleston properties. Their
common boundary is on the southern side of Charleston North and on
the northern
side of Charleston South. Each adjoins the Kruger
National Park on the western side thereof. This boundary is not
fenced. The Sand
River traverses both the Charleston properties
roughly from north to south.
[3]
Ms Nan Yvonne Trollip (previously Westcott) and Ms Phyllis Marie
Beaumont were daughters
of Mr Unger. Ms Trollip was the mother of the
first and second respondents and Ms Beaumont the mother of the third
and fourth respondents.
During the mid-1950’s Ms Trollip
established a camp on the western bank of the Sand River, on what is
now Charleston South
(the Charleston South Camp). During or about
1956, Ms Beaumont and her husband similarly built a camp on the
western bank of the
Sand River, on what is now Charleston North (the
Charleston North Camp). Over the years various changes and additions
were made
to each camp. The locations of the camps provided unique
opportunities for the appreciation and enjoyment of nature. Both the
Trollip
and Beaumont families were committed to nature conservation
and, as one could imagine, they had many memorable and exciting times
at the respective camps.
[4]
During 1964 Ms Trollip became the registered owner of the Charleston
South and Ms
Beaumont that of Charleston North. From January 1965 the
Charleston properties formed part of a proclaimed reserve named Sabi
Sand
Wildtuin, as did the other properties that presently constitute
MalaMala. Since July 2006, however, MalaMala was managed as an
autonomous private game reserve within the proclaimed reserve. It is
a highly sought-after eco-tourism destination.
[5]
By 1986 Ms Trollip had caused the incorporation of a company named
Charleston Farm
(Pty) Ltd. All 300 of the issued shares in the
company belonged to her. On 26 February 1986, Ms Trollip entered into
a sale of
shares agreement with Rattray Reserves (Pty) Ltd (Rattray
Reserves), in terms of which she sold and transferred two thirds of
the
shares in Charleston Farm (Pty) Ltd to Rattray Reserves. The sale
of shares agreement was subject to the execution of, first, an
agreement of sale between Ms Trollip and Charleston Farm (Pty) Ltd
for the sale of Charleston South and, second, a shareholders
agreement between Ms Trollip and Rattray Reserves in respect of their
shareholding in Charleston Farm (Pty) Ltd.
[6]
The first suspensive condition was duly fulfilled and Charleston
South transferred
to Charleston Farm (Pty) Ltd. The envisaged
shareholders agreement was also entered into on 26 February 1986. Ms
Trollip signed
the shareholders agreement in her personal capacity as
well as in the capacity as duly authorised representative of
Charleston
Farm (Pty) Ltd. The upshot of all this was that Ms Trollip
(one third) and Rattray Reserves (two thirds) became the shareholders
in Charleston Farm (Pty) Ltd, which owned Charleston South.
[7]
By 1986 Ms Beaumont had created a family trust, the Spulula Family
Trust. The Spulula
Family Trust held all the issued shares in a
company called Charleston North (Pty) Ltd. On 8 September 1986, the
Spulula Family
Trust also entered into a sale of shares agreement and
shareholders agreement with Rattray Reserves. The terms and
conditions of
these agreements were virtually identical to those of
the agreements between Ms Trollip and Rattray Reserves. The sale of
shares
agreement was also signed by Ms Beaumont in her personal
capacity, as well as by an authorised representative of Charleston
North
(Pty) Ltd. The execution of these agreements created the
similar position that the Spulula Family Trust (one third) and
Rattray
Reserves (two thirds) held the shares in Charleston North
(Pty) Ltd, which company was the registered owner of Charleston
North.
[8]
These shareholders agreements are central to the determination of the
matter and I
shall make reference to their material terms shortly. It
is necessary, however, to set out the subsequent changes effected to
the
shareholding in the two Charleston companies. During 1987,
Rattray Reserves transferred its shares in the Charleston companies
to a close corporation, MalaMala Ranch CC. That close corporation was
later converted into a company named MalaMala Ranch (Pty)
Ltd. As was
envisaged in the shareholders agreement between Ms Trollip and
Rattray Reserves, the former transferred her one third
shareholding
in Charleston Farm (Pty) Ltd to the Nan Trollip Trust during 1993.
[9]
Clause 9 of each shareholders agreement placed limitations on the
disposal of shares
in the Charleston companies to third parties. In
essence, clause 9.2 provided that a shareholder may only dispose of
shares to
a third party if all the shares held by it are disposed of
and the other shareholder did not accept an offer to purchase the
shares
at the same price and on the same terms than those offered by
the third party. Clause 9.4 set out a discrete procedure whereby a
shareholder could give an option to the other shareholder to either
sell its shares or to purchase the offering shareholder’s
shares at a consideration per share mentioned in the notice. The
shareholder receiving the notice could then either buy or sell
at the
price contained in the notice.
[10]
On 13 September 2010, the Nan Trollip Trust and the Spulula Family
Trust each gave notice to
MalaMala Ranch (Pty) Ltd in terms of clause
9.4 of the respective shareholders agreements. By then both Ms
Trollip and Ms Beaumont
had passed away. Contrary to the expectations
of the respondents, MalaMala Ranch (Pty) Ltd opted to purchase the
shares in the
Charleston companies rather than to sell its shares. As
a result, the respective minority shareholdings in the Charleston
companies
were sold to MalaMala Ranch (Pty) Ltd and it became the
sole shareholder of both.
[11]
In the meantime, a claim for the restitution of rights under the
Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994
was instituted in respect
of the properties comprising MalaMala. The owners of the properties,
as well as the respondents, disputed
the claim. Eventually the
Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform decided to restore
these properties to the claimant community
and made State funds
available for the purchase of the land.
[12]
This led to a sale agreement in terms of which the MalaMala land was
sold to the Department of
Rural Development and Land Reform. The
Department transferred the properties to the first appellant on 30
October 2013. Thus the
first appellant became the registered owner of
the properties comprising MalaMala, including of course the
Charleston properties.
The agreement in terms of which the second
appellant conducts the operation of MalaMala, was entered into on 1
March 2016.
Terms
of the shareholders agreements
[13]
In terms of the shareholders agreement in respect of Charleston Farm
(Pty) Ltd, ‘NT’
was stated to ‘mean and include Nan
Yvonne Trollip and her Successors in Title’. ‘NT’s
Successors in Title’
referred to Ms Trollip’s husband as
well as to the first and second respondents. In the shareholders
agreement pertaining
to Charleston North (Pty) Ltd, ‘PB’
similarly meant Ms Beaumont and her ‘Successors in Title’,
which referred
to the third and fourth respondents. The expression
‘the Trust’ referred to the Spulula Family Trust. For
convenience
I proceed to reproduce the material terms of the
Charleston North (Pty) Ltd shareholders agreement. As I have said,
the other shareholders
agreement contained corresponding provisions
regarding Ms Trollip, the first and second respondents, Charleston
Farm (Pty) Ltd,
Charleston South and the Nan Trollip Trust.
[14]
The agreement defined ‘Viewing Rights’ in the following
terms:
‘
[S]hall
mean the right of access to and egress from and of traversing
Charleston North, whether on foot or in a vehicle or in or
on any
other form of transport, for the purpose of viewing fauna and flora,
including the right to exercise such other rights in
regard to
Charleston North as shall be implicit in or incidental to the viewing
of fauna and flora . . .’
The
definition of ‘Affiliate’ included a holding company of
Rattray Reserves, a subsidiary of Rattray Reserves and a
company in
which the managing director of Rattray Reserves directly or
indirectly held a controlling interest. MalaMala Ranch (Pty)
Ltd was
an ‘Affiliate’.
[15]
Clauses 2.1 and 2.2 recorded that Charleston North (Pty) Ltd had
purchased Charleston North from
the Spulula Family Trust and that the
latter had sold two thirds of the shares in that company to Rattray
Reserves. Clause 2.3
proceeded to say:
‘
The
Parties wish to record their respective rights and obligations as
shareholders in the Company and to provide for the creation
and
entrenchment of the right to use and occupy Charleston North Camp and
the Viewing Rights in favour of PB.’
[16]
Clause 11.1 provided:
’
11.1
PB shall have:
11.1.1
the sole and exclusive use and occupation of Charleston
North Camp;
11.1.2
Viewing Rights;
11.1.3
the right to bring guests, who shall at all times be accompanied by
PB, and not exceeding 16 (sixteen) in number, upon Charleston
North
in the normal course of the exercise of the rights hereby granted to
PB provided that no consideration shall be given to
or received by PB
for the benefits enjoyed by such guests, provided further that PB
shall procure that such guests shall abide
by the provisions of this
agreement; . . .’
I
refer to these rights as the occupation and viewing rights.
[17]
In terms of clause 11.2, Rattray Reserves undertook obligations to
facilitate the exercise of
the occupation and viewing rights through
Charleston North (Pty) Ltd or an ‘Affiliate’. These were
to supervise and
maintain the Charleston North Camp and to make a
four-wheel drive vehicle and three servants available to the
occupants of the
camp. Clause 11.3 provided for rights similar to the
‘Viewing Rights’ to Ms Beaumont (not ‘PB’ as
defined)
in respect of other properties owned by or under the control
of Rattray Reserves or an ‘Affiliate’.
[18]
Clause 11.4 read:
‘
To
the extent that the Viewing Rights and/or the rights hereby granted
to PB in respect of Charleston North Camp are or may at any
time in
the future become registrable against the title deeds of the Company
over Charleston North, Rattray Reserves shall, upon
request in
writing by PB addressed to the Company, and at the cost of PB,
procure the adoption of all such resolutions, the granting
of all
such powers, the signature and lodgement of all such applications and
the taking of all such other steps as may be necessary
or expedient
for the purpose of procuring registration of such rights in the
appropriated Deeds Registry.’
[19]
Clause 11.6 provided:
‘
Should
PB or the Trust sell or otherwise dispose of the Shares held by PB or
the Trust, to any person other than Rattray Reserves
or an Affiliate,
the rights created in terms of clauses 11.1, 11.2 and 11.3 shall
terminate with effect from the date of such sale.
Should, however,
the Shares be sold, or otherwise disposed of to Rattray Reserves or
an Affiliate, the said rights shall endure
until the death of the
last dying of PB’s Successors in Title.’
Litigation
History
[20]
Despite the developments set out above, the respondents continued to
exercise the occupation
and viewing rights. Soon after the second
appellant took control of the management of MalaMala, however, it
took the stance that
the occupation and viewing rights had ceased to
exist. It accordingly notified the respondents that they would not be
granted access
to MalaMala after 31 July 2016. That sparked the
litigation that led to the present appeal.
[21]
The respondents launched an application in the Mpumalanga Division of
the High Court, Mbombela,
for the enforcement of the occupation and
viewing rights. Their principal contention was that clause 11.1 read
with clause 11.6
of the shareholders agreements afforded them the
right to the registration of servitudes against the title deeds of
the Charleston
properties. In the alternative, on the basis that the
occupation and viewing rights constituted mere personal rights, their
case
was that these rights were enforceable against the appellants
through the doctrine of notice.
[22]
The appellants’ main argument was that a proper interpretation
of the shareholders agreements
indicated that no servitudal rights
had been granted. Their alternative contention was that the
provisions of s 3 of the Subdivision
of Agricultural Land Act 70 of
1970 rendered the occupation and viewing rights invalid and
unenforceable. The premise of the argument
was that the Charleston
properties constituted agricultural land. The appellants proceeded to
contend that the rights to ‘the
sole and exclusive use and
occupation’ of the approximately 0,5 hectares upon which each
of the two camps were situated,
amounted to a subdivision of
agricultural land without the required written consent of the
Minister of Agriculture.
[23]
The matter came before Legodi JP. He rejected the argument that the
provisions of the Subdivision
of Agricultural Land Act were
applicable, on the basis that the grant of the occupation and viewing
rights did not amount to a
subdivision of land. He held, however,
that the occupation and viewing rights were neither servitudal rights
nor enforceable against
the appellants under the doctrine of notice.
He consequently dismissed the application of the respondents with
costs, such costs
to include the costs of two counsel.
[24]
With the leave of this court, the respondents appealed to the full
court of that division. That
court (Mashile J, Mphahlele J and
Greyling Coetzer AJ concurring) upheld the appeal. It made short
shrift of the argument based
on the Subdivision of Agricultural Land
Act. It framed its conclusion on the enforcement of the occupation
and viewing rights in
these terms:
‘
A
simple fact is, however, that the rights have always been
registrable. Whether the rights were registrable or not would be
rendered
irrelevant in an instance where the shares were sold to a
party outside of the Rattray Group. Now that they have been acquired
by a company within the Group, the Appellants can exercise their
choice to register them.’
And:
‘
The
conclusion on this question ought to be that the rights of the
Appellants have always been enforceable regardless of whether
or not
they were in addition, registrable.’
It
proceeded to grant the order sought by the respondents and directed
the appellants, jointly and severally, to pay the costs of
the
application and of the appeal, including the costs of two counsel.
The present appeal is with the special leave of this court.
Rights
to registration of servitudes
[25]
In the light of what I have said, the first issue is whether the
respondents were afforded servitudal
rights. A servitude is a real
right to use the property of another in a particular manner,
irrespective of a change in ownership
of that property. The right may
be attached to a particular dominant tenement (praedial servitude) or
to a particular person (personal
servitude) and comes into existence
upon its registration in the Deeds Office, save where the servitude
is acquired by prescription.
See
Cillie v Geldenhuys
[2008]
ZASCA 54
;
[2008] All SA 507
(SCA);
2009 (2) SA 325
(SCA) para 13 and
A J Van der Walt
The Law of Servitudes
1 ed (2016) at 322.
[26]
The personal right to claim the registration of the servitude (
ius
in personam ad rem acquirendam
) may of course arise from an
agreement. Such a right would exist where on a proper interpretation
of the agreement, two requirements
are met, namely:
(a)
The person who created the right intended to bind the present owner
of the property as well
as successors in title; and
(b)
The right resulted in a subtraction from the dominium of the land
against which it is registered.
See
Ethekwini Municipality v Mounthaven
(Pty) Ltd
[2018] ZACC 43
;
2019 (4) SA 394
(CC) para 11 and
27 Lawsa
2 ed paras 63-65.
There is a presumption against the creation of a servitude and in
cases of doubt or ambiguity the court will
adopt the construction
that least encumbers the servient tenement. See
Willoughby’s
Consolidated Co Ltd v Copthall Stores Ltd
1918 AD 1
at 16,
Kruger
v Joles Eiendom (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 138
;
[2009] 1
All SA 553
(SCA);
2009 (3) SA 5
(SCA) para 8 and
24 Lawsa
2 ed
para 543.
[27]
Under the doctrine of notice, the personal right to claim the
registration of a servitude is
also enforceable against a person who
bears knowledge thereof. See
Bowring NO v Vrededorp Properties CC
and Another
2007 (5) SA 391
paras 7-8. Where an interpretation of
the agreement in accordance with the ordinary well-known principles
of construction leads
to the conclusion that any one of the
requirements above is absent, the right to use the property is not
registerable. If the intention
is only to bind the present owner, the
right is not registrable even though it amounts to a subtraction from
the dominium of the
property concerned. In this regard
s 63(1)
of the
Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937
provides:
‘
No
deed, or condition in a deed, purporting to create or embodying any
personal right, and no condition which does not restrict
the exercise
of any right of ownership in respect of immovable property, shall be
capable of registration: Provided that a deed
containing such a
condition as aforesaid may be registered if, in the opinion of the
registrar, such condition is complimentary
or otherwise ancillary to
a registrable condition or right contained or conferred in such
deed.’
[28]
At the outset of the analysis it is necessary to place the references
in the shareholders agreements
to the successors in title of Ms
Trollip and Ms Beaumont respectively in proper perspective. It is
clear from their context that
these were not references to successors
in title in the ordinary meaning thereof. They were mere convenient
labels to refer to
the persons who were also offered the occupation
and viewing rights, but were not parties to the shareholders
agreements, such
as the respondents. I do accept, however, that the
respondents duly accepted the benefits that had so been offered to
them by agreement
between the parties to the shareholders agreements.
[29]
The appellants correctly conceded that the Charleston companies were
parties to the respective
shareholders agreements. In my view, the
occupation and viewing rights constituted subtraction from the
dominium of the respective
Charleston properties. It is common cause
that at all relevant times the appellants had knowledge of the
respondents’ claims
to the occupation and viewing rights. It
follows that in the event of a finding that the Charleston companies
intended their respective
successors in title to be bound to the
occupation and viewing rights, they would be enforceable against the
appellants. As I shall
show, however, this is where the respondents’
case flounders.
[30]
I find no indication in the shareholders agreements of an intention
on the part of the Charleston
companies to bind their respective
successors in title. In this regard the respondents relied on clauses
2.3 and 11.4 of the shareholders
agreements, quoted above. But these
provisions are neutral and do not support the respondents’
argument. Clause 11.4, in
particular, clearly stated that to the
extent that the occupation and viewing rights ‘are or may at
any time in the future
become registrable against the title deeds’,
Rattray Reserves would be obliged to take the steps necessary to
effect such
registration.
[31]
In addition, the arrangements between the respective shareholders in
terms of the shareholders
agreements point the other way. In this
regard the appellants referred to two categories of entrenchments in
the shareholders agreements.
The first category imposed limitations
on the disposal of the respective Charleston properties. The
shareholders agreements provided:
that the minority shareholder would
be entitled to have a director on the board of directors; that in the
absence of that director
there would not be a quorum; and that the
respective Charleston properties could only be sold or disposed of
with the unanimous
approval of the board of directors. The parties to
the shareholders agreements thus contemplated that the Charleston
properties
might be disposed of, but made no provision for the
survival of the occupation and viewing rights in such an event.
[32]
The second category imposed limitations on the sale of the shares in
the Charleston companies
to third parties, subject to detailed
exceptions. This takes one to clause 11.6 of the shareholders
agreements. It will be recalled
that it explicitly stated that should
the minority shareholding be sold to anyone other than Rattray
Reserves or an ‘Affiliate’,
the occupation and viewing
rights would terminate.
[33]
Thus, in terms of the shareholders agreements the occupation and
viewing rights would not survive
the disposal of the Charleston
properties or even the sale of the minority shareholding in a
Charleston company to a third party.
This is inconsistent with an
intention on the part of the Charleston companies to bind their
successors in title to the occupation
and viewing rights. In sum, not
only did the Charleston companies not bind their successors in title,
but their shareholders arranged
their affairs on that understanding.
I therefore conclude that the respondents were not afforded the right
to have the occupation
and viewing rights registered against the
title deeds of the Charleston properties and that they in fact
terminated when the Charleston
properties were sold.
Alternative
arguments
[34]
As I have said, the respondents argued in the alternative that even
if they had no rights to
obtain the registration of servitudes, the
occupation and viewing rights should be enforced against the
appellants under the doctrine
of notice. It has been said that this
anomalous doctrine is a purely equitable one, aimed at tempering the
strict precedence of
real rights over personal rights in appropriate
circumstances. See
Meridian Bay Restaurant (Pty) Ltd and Others v
Mitchell SC NO
[2011] ZASCA 30
;
2011 (4) SA 1
(SCA) para 13. In
terms of the doctrine, limited real effect is given to a personal
right against those who have knowledge of the
right. The respondents
contended that, in the circumstances, their mere personal rights
against the Charleston companies were protectable
under the doctrine
of notice by analogy or judgments such as
Associated South African
Bakeries (Pty) Ltd v Oryx & Vereinigte Bäckereien (Pty) Ltd
en Andere
1982 (3) SA 893
(A) (right of pre-emption) and
Cussons
en Andere v Kroon
2001 (4) SA 833
(SCA) (right of partner to
consent to alienation of partnership asset).
[35]
In
Cussons v Kroon
para 12, Streicher JA held that the
underlying reason for the enforcement in
Associated Bakeries
of the right of pre-emption against the person who had knowledge
thereof, was that the latter wrongfully interfered with the personal
right of the former. This appears to me to be a sound and principled
basis upon which the future application of the doctrine of
notice to
mere personal rights should be considered. See also
Meridian Bay
paras 19-21. But this issue does not arise in this case, for the
simple reason that I have held that the occupation and viewing
rights
had terminated when the Charleston companies disposed of the
Charleston properties. Nothing remained that could be protected
under
the doctrine of notice.
[36]
In the circumstances it is unnecessary to consider the argument based
on the Subdivision of Agricultural
Land Act. It follows that the
appeal must succeed and that the order of Legodi JP should be
reinstated. Costs should follow the
result of both appeals. It was
not in dispute that the employment of two counsel was reasonable.
[37]
For these reasons the following order is issued:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with an order
dismissing
the appeal with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
C
H G VAN DER MERWE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellants: G L
Grobler SC and H S Havenga SC
Instructed
by:
Larson Falconer Hassan Parsee Inc, Umhlanga
Rocks
Symington
& De Kok, Bloemfontein.
For
respondents: M du P van der Nest SC and
D A Turner
Instructed
by:
Bowman Gilfillan Inc, Johannesburg
McIntyre
& Van der Post, Bloemfontein.
sino noindex
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[2023] ZASCA 37Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa96% similar
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[2026] ZASCA 5Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa96% similar
NAD Property Income Fund (Pty) Ltd v Bushbuckridge Local Municipality and Another (422/2024) [2025] ZASCA 184 (4 December 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 184Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa96% similar