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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Naude (2020/22584)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 194 (27 February 2025)
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Naude (2020/22584)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 194 (27 February 2025)
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sino date 27 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2020/22584
[1]
REPORTABLE: NO
[2]
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
[3]
REVISED: NO
DATE:
27 February 2025
In
the application for leave to appeal between:
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
NAUDE,
YOLANDE
GERALDINE
Respondent
In
re:
NAUDE,
YOLANDE
GERALDINE
Plaintiff
and
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Defendant
JUDGMENT
PULLINGER
AJ
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against the whole of my
judgment and order dated 22 July 2024.
[2]
The applicant's "notice of leave to appeal" was delivered
on or about 18 September 2024.
[3]
The application for leave to appeal was delivered some forty-three
days out of time.
[4]
On 17 October 2024, nearly two months after the application
for leave to appeal was delivered, the applicant
delivered an
application for condonation.
[5]
Sutherland
J, as he then was, held in
Panayiotou,
[1]
that an application for leave to appeal has not been made for the
purposes of
Section 18(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
where it
has been delivered outside of the time periods prescribed in the
Rules of Court, unless and until condonation has been
granted. Thus
an application for leave to appeal as contemplated in
section 17
of
the
Superior Courts Act has
only been made once condonation has been
granted.
[6]
On this basis I shall begin with a consideration of the applicant’s
condonation application.
[7]
Condonation
is not a mere formality and even the absence of opposition is not an
overriding consideration. An applicant must make
out a proper case
for "good cause".
[2]
If only one element of "good cause" is satisfied, a proper
case for condonation will still not have been established.
As was
said by Miller JA in
Chetty
,
[3]
"It is not
sufficient if only one of these two requirements is met; for obvious
reasons a party showing no prospect of success
on the merits will
fail in an application for rescission of default judgement against
him, no matter how reasonable and convincing
the explanation of his
default. And ordered judicial process would be negated if, on the
other hand, a party who could offer no
explanation of his default
other than his disdain of the Rules was nevertheless permitted to
have judgment against him rescinded
on the ground that he had
reasonable prospects of success on the merits. The reason for my
saying that the appellant's application
for rescission fails on its
own demerits is that I am unable to find in his lengthy founding
affidavit, or elsewhere in the papers,
any reasonable or satisfactory
explanation of his default and total failure to offer any opposition
whatever to the confirmation
on 16 September 1980 of the rule
nisi
issued on 22 April 1980."
[4]
[8]
This is apposite because of the common requirement of "good
cause" in condonation and rescission applications.
[9]
In a case
such as this, where the applicant’s delay is the prominent
feature of its condonation application, the threshold
the applicant
was required to meet appears from
Uitenhage
Transitional Local Council
[5]
where the Supreme Court of Appeal formulated precisely what is
expected of an applicant in such circumstances. It said:
"[6] One would have
hoped that the many admonitions concerning what is required of an
applicant in a condonation application
would be trite knowledge among
practitioners who are entrusted with the preparation of appeals to
this Court: condonation is not
to be had merely for the asking; a
full, detailed and accurate account of the causes of the delay and
their effects must be furnished
so as to enable the Court to
understand clearly the reasons and to assess the responsibility. It
must be obvious that if the non-compliance
is time-related then the
date, duration and extent of any obstacle on which reliance is placed
must be spelled out."
[10]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal stridently criticised the appellant's application as
consisting of generalised statements without any
attempt to relate
them to the timeframe of its default or to enlighten the court as to
the materiality and effectiveness of any
steps taken by the
appellant's legal representatives to achieve compliance with the
Rules of Court at the earliest opportunity.
[6]
[11]
The same criticism may fairly be made of the founding affidavit in
the applicant's condonation application herein.
[11.1] The deponent
to the applicant’s founding affidavit, who identified himself
as "
the deputy director risk and assurance [of the City]
"
says that "…
due to a number of factors it became
impossible to file the application in time.
" He then
provides a timeline of events as follows:
[11.1.1] on
23 July 2024 a copy of the judgment was "given"
to the applicant for consideration;
[11.1.2] on 31 July
2024 the applicant presented the judgment to the Legal Department of
the applicant for consideration,
which department "…
had
to go through the transcribed records of the case that was initial
[sic]
before the above Honourable Court for consideration
";
and
[11.1.3] then on
12 September 2024 counsel was requested to provide advice
on prospects of success and a potential
apportionment of damages.
This opinion was allegedly provided on 17 and on which opinion
the applicant allegedly instructed
its attorneys to apply for leave
to appeal on 18 September 2024.
[11.2] I point out,
en passant
, that the final statement is incorrect. The
document styled "Notice of Leave to Appeal" is dated
17 September 2024.
This becomes material in the context of
my findings concerning the applicant’s supine approach to this
matter below;
[11.3] Thus
concludes the applicant:
"I submit that the
delay is not inordinate, and the explanation as given, the
circumstances of the delay were beyond the control
of the applicant
in this application."
[12]
The founding affidavit is singularly lacking in any evidence of who
allegedly considered the papers filed of record,
when they did so and
how long it took them to do so.
[13]
There is no account for the time lapse between 31 July 2024 and
12 September 2024. This delay required an explanation.
[14]
The seven days counsel took to provide a view on the matter is
de
minimus
in the context of a forty-three day delay and a near six
week period during which allegedly an (unidentified) official
considered
the transcript of the proceedings before Meyer AJ.
[15]
There are
no primary facts
[7]
to support
the contention that the timeous delivery of an application for leave
to appeal was "impossible" as the applicant
contends it
was, nor can the conclusion that "…
the
circumstances of the delay were beyond the control of the applicant
"
be sustained.
[16]
By the time the application for leave to appeal was delivered, the
applicant and its legal representatives must have
known it was out of
time. Despite this knowledge, it took a further two months for a
condonation application to be delivered. There
is no justification
for the applicant’s failure to explain why the application for
condonation itself was delivered so far
out of the prescribed time
period.
[17]
Steyn CJ,
in
Saloojee
,
[8]
when considering a condonation application for the late delivery of a
notice of appeal held:
"What calls for some
acceptable explanation, is not only the delay in noting an appeal and
in lodging the record timeously,
but also the delay in seeking
condonation. As indicated,
inter alia
, in
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Burger
,
1956 (4) SA 446
(AD) at p.
449, and in
Meintjies' case, supra
at p. 264, an
appellant should, whenever he realises that he has not complied with
a Rule of Court, apply for condonation
without delay. A perusal of
the Rules of this Court should have disclosed to the applicants'
attorneys that, when they obtained
consent to an appeal direct to
this Court on 8th October, the time for noting an appeal had already
expired. By 18th October, 1963,
they knew that the notice of appeal
tendered had been rejected by the Registrar as being out of time.
From then onwards it must
have been quite clear to them that an
application for condonation was necessary."
[18]
The
applicant’s failure to explain in any meaningful manner,
"…
the date, duration and extent of any obstacle on which reliance is
placed…"
leads
to the inference that the applicant was lackadaisical.
[9]
The applicant’s explanation is wholly inadequate and perhaps
even lacking in candour.
[19]
Moreover, the absence of any primary facts leads to the ineluctable
conclusion that the deponent to the founding affidavit
has no
personal knowledge of the allegations to which he deposes. I would
have expected the repeated admonitions of this Court
concerning
individuals in the employ of the applicant deposing to affidavits
with no personal knowledge of the facts would by now
have resonated
with the applicant. Sutherland DJP recently had this to say about
this practice:
"
[45]
The practice of requiring a legal advisor to depose to the affidavits
is both a clue to the cause of the
debacle and a manifestation of the
City’s reckless attitude. It should be self-evident that
the City’s legal
advisor has no personal knowledge of the
accounting. He cannot ever be more than a conduit. His affidavit
craftily states that
he makes it based on the information provided to
him, deftly evading the typical formula that the deponent has access
to and control
over the documents
qua
evidence. From whom the facts were truly obtained is never said, and
in this wholly unsatisfactory manner, the anonymous officials
who
compose the accounts are shielded from accountability. If Mr Ngwana
is ever be cross-examined on his affidavits it seems likely
that
embarrassment would soon follow. It must be stated bluntly that the
affidavits in litigation should be from persons who administer
the
accounts. The practice of a legal advisor being a deponent to facts
of which he has no personal knowledge must stop."
[10]
[20]
The application for condonation carries little to no probative value
even if the apparent hearsay nature thereof is overlooked.
[21]
Then there is the question of prejudice that the applicant overlooks.
[21.1] The
respondent is a widow.
[21.2] She was
successful in her loss of support claim against the applicant.
[21.3] She did not
work during the deceased’s lifetime and was constrained to
re-enter to workforce to support herself
and the three minor children
born of her marriage to the deceased on a small salary. She has a
very real interest in the finality
of this matter.
[21.4] The
prejudice to the respondent becomes even more acute when regard is
had to the trial before me being a
de novo
trial - Meyer AJ
having died before giving judgment in the matter.
[22]
Gautchi AJ,
on behalf of the full bench of this division, in
Aymac
[11]
stated the proposition thus:
"Inactivity by one
party affects the interest of the other party in the finality of
the matter. See in this regard
Federated Employers Fire
& General Insurance Co Ltd and Another v McKenzie
1969
(3) SA 360
(A) at 363A in which Holmes JA said the following
concerning the late filing of a notice of appeal:
'The late filing of a
notice of appeal particularly affects the respondent's interest in
the finality of his judgment - the time
for noting an appeal having
elapsed, he is
prima facie
entitled to adjust his
affairs on the footing that his judgment is safe; see
Cairns'
Executors v Gaarn
1912 AD 181
at p. 193, in which SOLOMON,
J.A., said:
'After all the object of
the Rule is to put an end to litigation and to let parties know where
they stand.'
See also
Minister
of Land Affairs and Agriculture and Others v D&F Wevell Trust and
Others
2008 (2) SA 184
(SCA) at 199B - D."
[23]
The applicant has not had any regard to the respondent’s rights
and her interests in the finality of the matter.
[24]
The applicant suggests that this matter is one of some importance to
the applicant because it
"… raises an
important question of law of whether the deceased can benefit from
his wrong doing, as the witness who
attended at the accident scene
indicated that he manner in which the motorcycle broke means that he
was not travelling at 60km/h".
But,
as will become clear, this contention arises from certain inferences
the applicant seeks to draw, in the absence of evidence
from which
those inferences may correctly be drawn.
[25]
But
even the ostensible importance of the matter is not sufficient for
leave to appeal to be granted,
[12]
much
less the granting of the condonation application.
[26]
I
am unpersuaded
that
this is a matter of importance as contemplated in the authorities.
There are no issues of public importance, or public interest,
nor
does it concern a large sum of money.
[13]
T
he
application for leave to appeal challenges only factual conclusions
reached from an evaluation of the evidence presented in trial.
[27]
The applicant’s condonation
application
is unsatisfactory in every respect. Mr Dlali, who
appeared for the applicant, correctly conceded as much.
[28]
Thus, while
the condonation application should simply be refused without
consideration of the merits,
[14]
I am guided by the approach of Heher JA in
Uitenhage
[15]
and
Ponnan JA in
Dengetenge
and accordingly consider the merits of the application for leave to
appeal in order to assess the applicant’s prospects of
success.
In so doing, I am mindful of the principal laid down in
United
Plant Hire
,
[16]
that
"It is well settled
that, in considering applications for condonation, the Court has a
discretion, to be exercised judicially
upon a consideration of all of
the facts; and that in essence it is a question of fairness to both
sides. In this enquiry, relevant
considerations may include the
degree of non-compliance with the Rules, the explanation therefore,
the prospects of success
on appeal, the importance of the case,
the respondent's interest in the finality of his judgment, the
convenience of the Court,
and the avoidance of unnecessary delay in
the administration of justice. The list is not exhaustive.
These factors are not
individually decisive but are interrelated and must be weighed
one against the other; thus a slight delay
and a good
explanation may help to compensate for prospects of success which are
not strong."
[29]
At the hearing, Mr Dlali quite properly
abandoned certain of the grounds raised in the applicant’s
application for leave to
appeal. These concerned Mr Danielson’s
"opinion" of how the fatal accident occurred and my
rejection of Ms Smit’s
evidence concerning signage.
[30]
The
applicant does not take issue with the formulation of the dispute
that was tried before me.
[17]
The applicant also accepts that, in the lighting conditions at the
time of the fatal accident, the trench in the curve on Louis
Botha
Avenue could not be seen.
[18]
In the same way, it does not take issue with the finding that the
applicant was negligent in not posting signage warning of the
curve
in the road and the warning of the danger in the road, being the
trench.
[19]
[31]
The applicant does persist with two issues.
The first concerns the contention that the deceased was speeding and
that this contributed
to the fatal accident and the second, the
"quality" of the evidence upon which Dr de Beer based his
opinions and calculations.
I use the word "quality"
advisedly because the issue concerns the absence of bank statements
from which, the applicant
contends, the deceased’s income and
household expenditure could be "verified".
[32]
Many of the points in the application for
leave to appeal and, as appears from the applicant’s heads of
argument, overlap.
For the sake of brevity, I address the related
points together.
[33]
The applicant's main contention is that, on
the night of the fatal accident, the deceased was riding his
motorcycle at a speed in
excess of the prescribed speed limit;
therefore, so the argument goes, the deceased's own unlawful conduct
caused or at the very
least contributed, to his death.
[34]
During argument Mr Smit, who appeared
for the respondent, referred me to certain passages from the
transcript of the proceedings
before Meyer AJ. Mr Dlali
relied on a further passage.
[35]
These passages concern the damage to the
deceased's motorcycle pursuant to it colliding with the pavement
after striking the trench
and the inferences concerning speed which
the applicant seeks to draw from those passages.
[36]
These inferences are, at best, speculative.
There was no evidence concerning the effect of the weight of the
deceased's motorcycle
nor any evidence concerning the forces at which
a motorcycle fork, such as the one on the model ridden by the
deceased, could endure
before it would come apart. In the same way,
there was no evidence concerning the nature of the pavement and the
effect that striking
the pavement would have in relation to
generating the force necessary for the fork to break.
[37]
The expert witness, Sergeant Lottering
declined, both the before me and Meyer AJ, to opine on the
deceased’s speed. He
pointed out that he was not then qualified
to make such an estimation and could not,
ex
post facto
, do so.
[38]
Mr Danielsen's unchallenged evidence
was that the deceased had slowed down for him and another motorcycle
rider to catch up
with him ahead of them entering the curve. Whether
or not they entered the curve together is of little moment. Mr
Danielsen gave
unchallenged evidence as to why the motorcycle he was
riding could not at that point, exceed approximately 60 kilometres
per
hour.
[39]
Logic dictates that if Mr Danielsen
had caught up to the deceased, riding at no more than 60 kilometres
per hour, the
deceased must have entered the curve at a speed less
than that.
[40]
But, even if speed played a role, this is
insufficient for purposes of contributory negligence.
[41]
In
Kottler
[20]
the full court of the then Transvaal Provincial Division considered
the question as to whether excessive speed,
simpliciter
,
constituted negligence for the purposes of a delictual claim. The
court of appeal held:
"…
I have no doubt that the plaintiff established that, though the
figure cannot be fixed on the evidence that anything
like that
mentioned by van den Berg, the defendant was travelling at a speed
considerably over 15 miles per an hour. But the question
still
remains whether, as regards traffic or pedestrians entering the
intersection from the South, the defendant's speed constituted
negligence. This depends on whether the defendant could, in the
circumstances reasonably be expected to anticipate that a pedestrian
might not only emerge from behind the wagon, but proceed to run
across the street without looking. The answer to this question,
in my
opinion, is clearly in the negative."
[21]
[42]
The proposition holds true here; even if it
could be established that the deceased had been speeding (and it is
my judgment that
there is no such evidence to support such a
finding), there is no evidence to suggest that speed played a role in
the fatal accident,
regard being had to the lighting conditions, the
existence of the trench and the absence of warning signs.
[43]
In the circumstances, the notion advanced
by the applicant that the deceased's conduct contributed to his death
cannot be sustained.
This puts paid to any question of contributory
negligence.
[44]
In relation to Dr de Beer’s opinion
and calculations, the applicant contends that on account of
Dr de Beer not being
in possession of certain bank
statements, the facts that gave rise to the conclusions in his report
could not be verified.
[45]
The applicant's approach ignores the
respondent’s direct evidence that she did not work during the
deceased’s lifetime,
that the deceased’s earnings
supported the family, afforded them certain luxuries and that the
deceased was generally paid
in cash for the work that he did. This
was left unchallenged in cross-examination.
[46]
These were the facts that Dr de Beer
relied upon having conducted interviews with the respondent and
Mrs Naude (senior).
These facts formed the basis of his
conclusion that, but for the accident, the deceased's earnings would
have remained the same
as there was no reason to believe that his
work would not have continued in the same vein with the same
remuneration and that the
business may even have grown.
[47]
In relation to the bank statements, and in
cross examination, Dr de Beer stated that he could not
make assumptions
based on bank accounts alone because they were
incomplete, therefore irrelevant and would not lead to a correct
answer. He had
obtained further information underpinning his
conclusions from the respondent, the deceased's mother, his own
research and consideration
of the respondent's living circumstances.
He disagreed with the proposition put to him that a loss of support
claim cannot be found
because of the absence of collateral evidence
being the said bank statements.
[48]
In relation to living and other expenses,
and during cross examination, the respondent testified that she
made payments on
behalf of the household with the money given to her
by the deceased. This money was given to her in cash which meant that
she was
well aware of how much the deceased earned and to what uses
it was being put. This too was unchallenged in cross-examination.
This
evidence was supported by Mrs Naude (senior).
[49]
At no point was it put to the respondent in
cross examination or otherwise that the deceased's earnings or
the household expenses
during his life were overstated.
[50]
Once
again, the applicant adduced no evidence to suggest that Dr de Beer's
calculations were incorrect nor was it suggested
that the
respondent's evidence was unreliable. I found that Dr de Beer’s
conclusions were consistent with the proved facts.
This is the
approach taken in respect of expert calculations.
[22]
[51]
I am uncertain as to how it can
bona
fide
be contended by the applicant that
Dr de Beer's conclusions are incorrect, this in
circumstances where it failed to dispute
that the bulk of the
deceased's earnings were received in cash, given to the respondent to
pay household expenses and, axiomatically,
therefore not deposited
into a bank account.
[52]
The role of bank statements that do not
reflect deposits or payments for the reasons aforesaid play no role
in this matter.
[53]
The applicant’s contentions that bank
statements are "the best evidence" and were required to
establish the respondent’s
loss of income is, at best,
predicated on a misunderstanding of what constitutes "best
evidence".
[54]
In
De
Klerk
,
[23]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal distinguished between that which constitutes
"the best evidence available for the purposes of proving
damages" and the "best evidence rule". Properly
understood, the latter relates to the admissibility of evidence
and
the former to evidence available to a plaintiff to prove its case.
The Supreme Court of Appeal referred to the decision in
Enslin
[24]
where
Galgut J, as he then was, said:
"A
plaintiff is … expected to lead evidence which will enable an
accurate assessment to be made if such evidence is
available."
[25]
[55]
Schutz
JA cited, further, the decision in
Lazarus
[26]
which
in turn quoted from
Hersman
[27]
where
De Villiers J drew the distinction between an instance where
evidence is available to a plaintiff and is not produced,
and
circumstances where the best available evidence is produced although
"
not
entirely of a conclusive character
"
concluding that "…
if
it is the best evidence available, the Court must use it and arrive
at a conclusion based on it
."
[28]
[56]
The former case concerned whether the
plaintiff had placed sufficient evidence before the Court to estimate
the loss suffered by
him pursuant to a motor vehicle accident.
[57]
In the latter case, the appeal court
considered,
inter alia
,
the computation of damages for the non delivery of certain
produce where there was no means of obtaining the value of the
produce that ought to have been delivered. It held:
"Looking
at all the evidence in regard to price, it seems to me that the
plaintiff gave all the evidence which he could possibly
give, under
the peculiar circumstances of the case, to prove the amount of
damages he suffered."
[29]
[58]
In
Ndlovu
[30]
Spilg J
criticised a plaintiff for not providing bank statements where these
were available and could readily have established
his income.
[31]
In
Ndlovu
,
the bank statements would have served as definitive evidence of the
plaintiff's income. In that instance, the bank statements
were of
clear relevance and would have constituted "best evidence".
This is an entirely different scenario from the facts
in the present
case.
[59]
The principle, then, is that a plaintiff in
proving its damages, must adduce the most cogent evidence available.
This, as
Hersman
shows is dependent upon the circumstances. The most cogent available
evidence, in a particular set of circumstances, is "the
best
evidence".
[60]
I find, in the circumstances, there is no
merit to the challenge on Dr de Beer’s findings and
calculations.
[61]
I conclude therefore, that the applicant
does not enjoy any prospects of success on appeal. Thus the applicant
fails on both legs
of the "good cause" test.
[62]
In the result, I make the following order:
The
application for condonation is dismissed with costs.
A
W PULLINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be
10h00
on
27 February 2025
.
DATE
OF HEARING:
21
February 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
27 February 2025
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Adv S Dlali
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANT:
K Matji & Partners Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Adv D J Smit
ATTORNEY
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Leon JJ van Rensburg Attorneys
[1]
Panayiotou
v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd and Others
2016 (3) SA 110
(GJ) at [14] and [15]
[2]
Saloojee
& Another v Minister of Community Development
1965 (2) SA 135
(A) at 138 E - F
[3]
Chetty
v Law Society, Transvaal
1985 (2) SA 756 (A)
[4]
At 765D - E
[5]
Uitenhage
Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service
2004 (1) SA 292 (SCA)
[6]
Ibid
at [7]
[7]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines v Government of the RSA
1999 (2) SA 279
(T) at 324D – F;
Die
Dros (Pty) Limited and Another v Telefon Beverages CC and Others
2003 (4) SA 207
(C) at [28];
Knoop
N.O and Another v Gupta and Another
2021 (3) SA 88
(SCA) at [19]
[8]
supra
at 138 H to 129 A;
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v van der Merwe
2016 (1) SA 599
(SCA) at 609 F, citing
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Burger
1956 (4) SA 466
(A) at 449 G - H
[9]
Dengetenge
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining and Development Company
Ltd and Others
[2013] 2 All SA 251
(SCA) at [13];
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v van der Merwe
2016 (1) SA 599
(SCA) at 611 I/J
## [10]Millu v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and
Another
[2024]
ZAGPJHC 419 (18 March 2024)
[10]
Millu v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and
Another
[2024]
ZAGPJHC 419 (18 March 2024)
[11]
Aymac
CC v Widgerow
2009 (6) SA 433
(W) at [40]
[12]
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development v Southern Africa
Litigation Center
2016 (3) SA 317
(SCA) at 330C
[13]
Compare
Administrateur,
Transvaal v van der Merwe
[1994] ZASCA 83
;
1994 (4) SA 347
(A) at 357 I;
Alpha
Bank BPK en Andere v Registrateur van Banke en Andere
[1995] ZASCA 84
;
1996 (1) SA 330
(A) at 339 C - D
[14]
Blumenthal
and Another v Thompson NO and Another
[1993] ZASCA 190
;
1994 (2) SA 118
(A) at 121 I to 122 B
[15]
supra
at [11]
[16]
United
Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v Hills
1976
(1) SA 717
(A) at 720 E –G; followed in,
inter
alia
,
Minister
of Safety and Security and Another v Scott and Another
2014 (6) SA 1
(SCA) at [16]
[17]
Judgment
at [14]
[18]
Judgment
at [16]
[19]
Judgment
at [74]
[20]
Kottler
v Jordaan
1930 TPD 828
[21]
At 829
[22]
Dlamini
v Road Accident Fund
[2022] 4 All SA 360
(GJ) at [69] to [75]
[23]
De
Klerk v Absa Bank Ltd and Others
2003 (4) SA 315
(SCA) at 37
[24]
Enslin
v Meyer
1960 (4) SA 520 (T)
[25]
At 523G
[26]
Lazarus
v Rand Steam Laundries
(1946) (Pty) Ltd
1952 (3) SA 49
(T) at 51
[27]
Hersman
v Shapiro & Co
1926
TPD 367
at 379
[28]
At 523 - 524
[29]
At 379
[30]
Ndlovu
v Road Accident Fund
2014
(1) SA 415 (GSJ)
[31]
At [68]
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