Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 276South Africa
Sibanye Gold Limited and Others v Valuation Appeal Board for Rand West City Local Municipality and Others (2022/043793) [2025] ZAGPJHC 276 (13 March 2025)
Headnotes
around May and June 2022, during which the appellants and the Municipality presented expert evidence and legal argument to the VAB. On 19 July 2022, the VAB ruled as follows:
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPJHC 276
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Sibanye Gold Limited and Others v Valuation Appeal Board for Rand West City Local Municipality and Others (2022/043793) [2025] ZAGPJHC 276 (13 March 2025)
Sibanye Gold Limited and Others v Valuation Appeal Board for Rand West City Local Municipality and Others (2022/043793) [2025] ZAGPJHC 276 (13 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_276.html
sino date 13 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2022-043793
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
In
the matter between:
SIBANYE
GOLD LIMITED
First Appellant
GOLD
FIELDS OPERATIONS LIMITED
Second Appellant
GFI
JOINT VENTURE HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Third Appellant
and
THE VALUATION APPEAL
BOARD FOR
RAND
WEST CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
THE MUNICIPAL VALUER
FOR
RAND
WEST CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
RAND
WEST CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
Mahosi J (Twala J and
Allen AJ concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal brought in terms of section 18(4) of the Superior
Courts Act
[1]
(“the Act”) against the order of Makume J, sitting as a
court of first instance, in terms of which it granted the third
respondent's section 18(3) application and ordered that the 09
September 2024 order be immediately operational and executable.
[2] It
is concerned with whether the parties ought to proceed with the
incomplete appeal proceedings before the
Valuation Appeal Board for
Rand West City Local Municipality (“VAB”) to finality
before bringing an application to
review a ruling granted on
separated issues.
[3] The
first to third appellants (“the appellants”) and the Rand
West City Local Municipality (“the
Municipality”) have
been embroiled in litigation relating to the valuation of the mining
properties and, consequently, the
municipal property rates and taxes
since 2013.
[4]
The amendment of the Local Government: Municipal Property Rates
Act
[2]
(“the Rates Act”),
which came into effect on 01 July 2015, backdrops the issues that
gave rise to the current dispute
between the parties. Prior to its
amendment, section 17(1)(f) exempted mining rights holders from
paying municipal property rates
and taxes on mining rights. The
amendment now allows for rating certain buildings, other immovable
structures and infrastructure
above the surface of the appellants'
mining properties.
[5]
The dispute commenced with the publication of the General Valuation
Roll on 01 October 2013, which the appellants
challenged. An
agreement was reached in 2018 for the appellants to pay, in the
interim, R108 million per annum pending the preparation
of a
supplementary valuation roll. In September 2019, the supplementary
Valuation Roll 4 (“SVR4”), which pertained
to the period
01 July 2014 to 30 June 2019, and later extended to 30 June 2021
(“2014GVR”), was published with an implementation
date of
01 October 2019. It reflected the appellants’ mining rights at
a combined market value of approximately R3,158 billion.
In October
2019, the appellants lodged objections against the entries and values
of the rateable parts of their respective mining
rights in SVR4. The
second respondent (“the Municipal Valuer”) dismissed the
appellants’ objections.
[6]
Dissatisfied with the outcome, the appellants lodged appeals with the
VAB against the Municipal Valuer’s
decisions on 06 April 2021.
At the commencement of the appeal proceedings in May 2022, the
parties reached an agreement to have
the issues involving the
interpretation and application of sections 17(1)(f) and 46(3) of the
Rates Act (separated issues) decided
first and separately from the
other issues in the appeal proceedings. On 04 June 2022, the VAB
ordered as follows:
“
1.
That the following issues in the appeal proceedings before the
Valuation Appeal Board (VAB) be
determined separately:
1.1
Whether the items listed in annexure A to this order are rateable in
terms of section 17(1)(f) of the
local government municipal property Rates Act 6 of
2004 (Rates Act) with
reference to –
1.1.1
whether they are movable or immovable
1.1.2
whether they are above the surface of land;
1.1.3
whether they are required for purposes of mining.
1.2
In relation to those items that the VAB finds to be rateable, whether
they fall to be disregarded
because they are-
1.2.1
under the surface of the property as contemplated in section
46(3)(a) of
the Rates Act; or
1.2.2
equipment as contemplated in section 46(3)(b) of the Rates
Act; or
1.2.3
machinery as contemplated in section 46(3)(b) of the Rates Act.”
[7]
The appeal hearing on the separated issues was held around May and
June 2022, during which the appellants
and the Municipality presented
expert evidence and legal argument to the VAB. On 19 July 2022, the
VAB ruled as follows:
“
1.
The Industrial headgear and winders are regarded as infrastructure
above the surface and are required
for mining purposes, these items
are rateable in terms of section 17(1)(f) of the Local Government:
Municipal Property Rates Act
6 of 2004 ("MPRA"). These
items cannot be disregarded in terms of section 46(3)(b) of the MPRA.
2.
The bulk air coolers, industrial cooling and refrigeration plants are
regarded as infrastructure,
above the surface and are required for
mining purposes, these items are rateable in terms of section
17(1)(f) of the MPRA. These
items cannot be disregarded in terms of
section 46(3)(b) of the MPRA.
3.
The steel and High Density Polyethylene (HDPE") pipes are
regarded as infrastructure
above the surface and are rateable in
terms of section" These items cannot be disregarded in terms of
section 46(3)(b) of
the MPRA.
4.
With regard to the industrial,
residential and social electricity, these constitute infrastructure
and only those owned by the Appellants, are above the surface and are
required for mining purposes are rateable in terms of section
17(1)(f). These items cannot be disregarded in terms of section
46(3)(b) of the MPRA.
5.
With regard to the Industrial and social sewer and wastewater
treatment the following applies:
5.1
The underground sewer and waste handling pipes are rateable in terms
of section 17(1)(f) of the MPRA although
they are regarded as
infrastructure and cannot be disregarded in terms of section 46(3)(b)
of the MPRA.
5.2
The dams, concrete tanks and concrete tranches at the wastewater
treatment facilities excluding, the
agitators, pumps, motors,
electrical cables and pipes are rateable in terms of section 17(1)(f)
of the MPRA.
6.
Industrial water supply, distribution pipes, potable water supply and
distribution pipes belonging
to the Appellants are rateable in terms
of section 17(1)(f) of the MPRA. These items cannot be disregarded in
terms of section
46(3)(b) of the MPRA.
7.
The concrete surface water reservoirs, owned by the Appellants are
rateable in terms of section
17(1)(f) of the MPRA in that they are
immovable structures above the surface of the mining property
required for purposes of mining.
These items cannot be disregarded in
terms of section 46(3)(b) of the MPRA.
8.
It is common cause between the parties that the railways and railway
stations are no longer applicable
and therefore cannot be taken into
account.
9.
Roads (gravel and tar) are ruled out as they are no longer disputed.”
[8]
Aggrieved by the VAB’s decision, the appellants launched an
application to review and set it aside on 04 November
2022. In its
answering affidavit, the Municipality relied on section 7(2) and (c)
of Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[3]
(“PAJA”) to raise a preliminary point challenging the
appellants’ failure to exhaust internal remedies prior
to
filing a review application. The review application served before
Makume J on 26 August 2024 and the judgment was handed down
on 09
September 2024. In his judgment, Makume J dismissed the review
application and upheld the preliminary point ordering the
appeal
proceedings before the VAB to proceed to its finality.
[9] On
30 September 2024, the appellants applied for leave to appeal Makume
J’s judgment and order. In opposing
the appellants’ leave
to appeal application, the Municipality brought the section 18(3)
application, seeking the interim
enforcement of the judgment and
orders. Both applications were argued before Makume J on 22 January
2025. On 23 January 2025, Makume
J issued an order dismissing the
appellants’ leave to appeal application and upholding the
Municipality’s section 18(3)
application. It was against the
above execution order that the appellants exercised their automatic
right of appeal under section
18(4) of the Act.
[10]
At the outset of the oral arguments before us and in the heads
of arguments, the appellant's counsel relied on the alleged
misdirection
by the Court of first instance, which they submitted was
dispositive of this appeal. In particular, they stated as follows:
“…
the
granting of the section 18(3) order was a misdirection by the court a
quo
. To
that end, we show that the Court
a quo
erred in upholding the Municipality’s
application in terms of section 18(3) of the Act (section 18(3)
application) in circumstances
where it had decided to dismiss the
appellants’ application for leave to appeal. We submit that
a
quo
ought to have instead found that
the section 18(3) order would have no practical effect in these
circumstances.”
[11]
A similar issue was considered in
Ntlemeza
v Hellen Suzman Foundation and another
[4]
where the counsel for Ntlemeza argued,
inter
alia
,
that the Court was precluded from considering an application to
enforce an order where the jurisdictional fact of a pending decision
on an application for leave to appeal or an appeal was absent. The
SCA commenced with the consideration of the provisions of section
18(1) and (2) and said:
“
[25]
…These two sections provide for two situations. First, a
judgment (the principal order) that is final in
effect, as
contemplated in s 18(1): In such a case the default position is that
the operation and execution of the principal order
is suspended
pending 'the decision of the application for leave to appeal or
appeal'. Second, in terms of s 18(2), an interlocutory
order that
does not have the effect of a final judgment: The default position (a
diametrically opposite one to that contemplated
in s 18(1)) is that
the principal order is not suspended pending the decision of the
application for leave to appeal or appeal.
This might at first blush
appear to be a somewhat peculiar provision as such a decision is not
appealable. However, this subsection
appears to have been inserted to
deal with the line of cases in which the ordinary rule was relaxed
referred to in para 20 above.
[26]
Both sections empower a court, assuming the presence of certain
jurisdictional facts, to depart from the
default position. It is
uncontested that the high Court's judgment on merits of General
Ntlemeza’s appointment is one final
in effect and therefore s
18(1) applies. This section provides that the operation and execution
of a decision that is the ‘subject
of an application for leave
to appeal or appeal’ is suspended pending the decision of
either of those two processes. Section
18(5) defines what the words
“subject of an application for leave to appeal or of appeal’
mean: ‘a decision becomes
the subject of an application for
leave to appeal or appeal, as soon as an application for leave to
appeal or notice of appeal
is lodged with the registrar in terms of
the rules.”
[12] In
determining whether the dismissal of the application for leave to
appeal before a decision on execution
application removed the
jurisdictional underpinning for an execution order, the SCA’s
short answer was “no”.
Its reasons were,
inter alia
,
that:
“
[28]
The primary purpose of s 18(1) is to reiterate the common law
position in relation to the ordinary effect of appeal
processes –
the suspension of the order being appealed – not to nullify it.
It was designed to protect the rights of
litigants who find
themselves in the position of General Ntlemeza, by ensuring, that in
the ordinary course, the orders granted
against them are suspended
whilst they are in the process of attempting, by way of the appeal
process, to have them overturned.
The suspension contemplated in s
18(1) would thus continue to operate in the event of a further
application for leave to appeal
to this Court and in the event of
that being successful, in relation to the outcome of a decision by
this Court in respect of the
principal order. Section 18(1) also sets
the basis for when the power to depart from the default position
comes into play, namely,
exceptional circumstances which must be read
in conjunction with the further requirements set by s18(3). As
already stated and
as will become clear later, the Legislature has
set the bar fairly high.”
[13]
The SCA found that General Ntlemeza’s preliminary point did not
accord with the plain meaning of s
18(1). It explained that “
s
18(1) does not say that the Court's power to reverse the automatic
suspension of a decision is dependent on that decision being
subject
to an application for leave to appeal or an appeal. It says that,
unless the court orders otherwise, such a decision is
automatically
suspended."
[14]
This approach was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Limited; Tasima (Pty) Limited
and Others v Road Traffic Management Corporation
and Others
[5]
as
follows:
“
[51]
Subsection (1), which is subject to subsections (2) and (3), provides
that the operation and execution of a decision
which is the subject
of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal is suspended
pending the decision of the application
for leave to appeal or the
appeal, unless a court under exceptional circumstances orders
otherwise. In turn, subsection (2) is
made subject to subsection (3).
It provides that, unless a court under exceptional circumstances
orders otherwise, the operation
and execution of a decision that is
an interlocutory order not having the final effect of a final
judgment, which is the subject
of an application for leave to appeal
or an appeal, is not suspended pending the decision on the
application for leave to appeal
or an appeal.
[52]
Crucially, subsection (3) requires an applicant for an execution
order to prove “on a balance of probabilities
that he or she
will suffer irreparable harm if the order is not granted and that the
other party will not suffer irreparable harm
if the court so orders”.
As explained in Ntlemeza, section 18(1) reiterates the common law
position to the effect that the
operation or execution of a judgment
is suspended when there is an application for leave to appeal or an
appeal. What ultimately
happens to the suspended operation or
execution of a judgment subject to an appeal process would be
determined by the outcome of
the appeal. If the appeal is
unsuccessful the suspension would cease, unless, of course, as noted
in Ntlemeza, “a further
application for leave to appeal”
is made.
[53] If
a court grants an order for the operation and execution of a decision
which is the subject of an application
for leave to appeal or of an
appeal, and its judgment is subsequently set aside on appeal and
judgment is granted in favour of
the appellant as it happened in
Tasima I, the order made under section 18(3) would then fall away.
This is so once no further application
for leave to appeal is made or
all appeal avenues have been exhausted. This, in my view, accords
with the intention and the tenor
of section 18.”
[15] In
the current matter, the order of Makume J came immediately into
operation and was executable when it was
issued on 09 September 2024.
When the appellants filed their application for leave to appeal, the
order was suspended pending the
decision on that application. Thus,
the Municipality’s application for the execution order was
within the framework of section
18(1), and the Court
a quo
did
not err in adjudicating it.
[16]
The remaining issue is whether the Court
a
quo
considered the requirements of
section
18, which reads:
“
(1)
Subject to subsections (2) and (3), and unless the Court under
exceptional circumstances orders otherwise,
the operation and
execution of a decision which is the subject of an application for
leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended
pending the decision of
the application or appeal.
(2)
Subject to subsection (3), unless the Court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise,
the operation and execution of a
decision that is an interlocutory order not having the effect of a
final judgment, which is the
subject of an application for leave to
appeal or of an appeal, is not suspended pending the decision of the
application or appeal.
(3)
A court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or
(2), if the party who applied
to the Court to order otherwise, in
addition proves on a balance of probabilities that he or she will
suffer irreparable harm if
the Court does not so order and that the
other party will not suffer irreparable harm if the Court so orders.
(4)
If a court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1) -
(i)
the Court must immediately record its reasons for doing so;
(ii)
the aggrieved party has an automatic right of appeal to the next
highest Court;
(iii)
the Court hearing such an appeal must deal with it as a matter of
extreme urgency; and
(iv)
such order will be automatically suspended, pending the outcome of
such appeal.
(5)
For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), a decision becomes the
subject of an application
for leave to appeal or of an appeal, as
soon as an application for leave to appeal or a notice of appeal is
lodged with the registrar
in terms of the rules.
[17]
In
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another
[6]
(“
Incubeta”),
the
Court considered the provisions of section 18 and formulated the test
as follows:
“
[16]
It seems to me that there is indeed a new dimension introduced to the
test by the provisions of s 18. The test
is twofold. The requirements
are:
First, whether or not
'exceptional circumstances' exist; and
Second,
proof on a balance of probabilities by the applicant of the presence
of irreparable harm to the applicant/victor, who wants
to put into
operation and execute the order; and the absence
of irreparable harm to the respondent/loser, who
seeks leave to
appeal.”
[7]
[18]
The issue is whether the Municipality established exceptional
circumstances and proven, on a balance of probabilities,
that the
appellants would suffer no irreparable harm if the section 18(3)
order were granted and that the Municipality would suffer
irreparable
harm if the section 18(3) order were denied.
[19]
On what constitutes exceptional circumstances, the SCA in
Ntlemeza
referred to
Incubeta
in which guidance was sought from
MV
Ais Mamas Seatrans Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas and another
[8]
where the Court stated that it was neither desirable nor possible to
lay down precise rules as to what circumstances are to be
regarded as
exceptional circumstances and that each case must be decided on its
own fact. In
Incubeta
,
the Court stated that:
“
[17]
What constitutes “exceptional circumstances has been addressed
by Thring J in MV Ais Mamas
2002 (6) SA 150
(C), where a summation of
the meaning of the phrase is given as follows at 156I – 157C:
What does emerge from an
examination of the authorities, however, seems to me to be the
following:
1.
What is ordinarily contemplated by the words “exceptional
circumstances” is something
out of the ordinary and of an
unusual nature; something which is excepted in the sense that the
general rule does not apply to
it; something uncommon, rare or
different; “besonder”, “seldsaam”,
“uitsonderlik”, or “in
hoë mate ongewoon”.
2.
To be exceptional, the circumstances concerned must arise out of, or
be incidental to, the
particular case.
3.
Whether or not exceptional circumstances exist is not a decision
which depends upon the exercise
of a judicial discretion: their
existence or otherwise is a matter of fact which the Court must
decide accordingly.
4.
Depending on the context in which it is used, the word “exceptional”
has two
shades of meaning: the primary meaning is unusual or
different; the secondary meaning is markedly unusual or specially
different.
5.
Where, in a statute, it is directed that a fixed rule shall be
departed from only under exceptional
circumstances, effect will,
generally speaking, best be given to the intention of the Legislature
by applying a strict rather than
a liberal meaning to the phrase, and
by carefully examining any circumstances relied on as allegedly being
exceptional.
[18]
Significantly, although it is accepted in that judgment that what is
cognisable as ‘exceptional circumstances’
may be
indefinable and difficult to articulate, the conclusion that such
circumstances exist in a given case, is not a product
of a
discretion, but a finding of fact.”
[20]
The Court
a quo
referred to, amongst others,
Incubeta
and
considered the history and the chronology of the events, which it
regarded as not only constituting exceptional circumstances
but also
demonstrating irreparable harm to the Municipality. It took into
account the provisions of the Rates Act, which envisages
the
finalisation of the appeal process within 141 days, the
Municipality’s constitutional obligations to
"structure
and manage its administration and budgeting planning process to give
priority to the basic needs of the community
and to promote the
social and economic development of the community"
, and
regarded the four-year delay as detrimental to the Municipality as it
is prohibited from implementing the supplementary valuation
roll
pending the final determination of the appeal proceedings. It also
considered the appellants' retraction from the agreement
between the
parties to the VAB proceedings soon after the ruling on the separated
issues and the agreed dates for the continuation
of the appeal to be
disturbing.
[21]
Before us, the appellants submitted that there was nothing
exceptional, uncommon, rare or different about
the duration of the
appeal proceedings such as to justify an extraordinary deviation from
the norm. We disagree with the appellants.
The Municipality’s
proper management of administration and budgeting is crucial in
meeting its constitutional duty to provide
essential services to the
communities. Thus, the protracted procedural delay in the
finalisation of an appeal process, which is
envisaged by the Rates
Act to be finalised within 141 (even if not protracted in bad faith
by a litigant), the critical role of
the Municipality in the
community and the public interest ought to be sufficient to cross the
threshold of 'exceptional circumstances'.
[22]
Regarding the requirements of section 18(3), the Court
a quo
took into account the Municipality’s submission that it suffers
irreparable harm every month as the delay in the finalisation
of the
appeal process and, thus, the implementation of the Valuation roll
has caused havoc in the Municipal administration and
finances. The
appellants
classified the Municipality’s
alleged irreparable harm as purely speculative on the basis that it
was founded on the presumption
that VAB would rubber-stamp the value
of R3.7 billion. In addition, they contended that the rates based on
the impugned values
reflected in the SVR4 and against which the
appellants have objected and appealed could not be included in the
funded budget as
realistically
anticipated revenues
to be collected
in that year or any other year pending the finalisation of the appeal
proceedings. However, the appellants overlook
that the delay in
finalising the appeal process, notwithstanding its outcome,
contributes to the Municipality’s ability to
put its finances
in order and comply with its constitutional mandate. Its irreparable
harm is, therefore, not speculative.
[23]
The appellants submitted that if Makume J’s order is executed,
they stand to suffer irreparable harm as they would be compelled to
pay the alleged property rates based on values that were determined
on defective VAB's decision, which, if later reviewed and set aside,
would amount to substantial overpayment. Further, they alleged
irreparable harm in the form of significant wasted costs estimated at
R15,5 million, which they are unlikely to recover if they
are
successful, considering the Municipality’s financial position.
[24]
The appellants' fear of substantial overpayment is inaccurate, as
they retain the right to review the final
decision of the VAB as soon
as it is issued. It is common cause that the appellants filed a
further application for leave to appeal
in the SCA. This and further
appeal processes up to the Constitutional Court were reasonably
anticipated by the Court
a quo
, which viewed the appellant to
be litigating lavishly at the expense of the public. For all the
above reasons, the Court
a quo
cannot be faulted in finding
that the appellants stand to suffer no irreparable harm if the
execution order is granted. In light
of the above, the appeal is
bound to fail.
[25]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
2.
The order of the Court a quo granting the third respondent’s
section 18(3) application
is upheld, with costs, and the order of 09
September 2024 is immediately operational and executable.
D. MAHOSI
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Heard:
26 February 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives through
email. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 13 March 2025.
Appearances
For the appellants:
Advocate C.F. van der Merwe
Instructed by: Norton
Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc. Attorneys
For the third respondent:
Mr A.D. de Swart of De Swart Myambo Hlahla Attorneys
[1]
Act
10 of 2013, as amended.
[2]
Act
6
of 2004, as amended.
[3]
Act
3 of 2000
[4]
[2017]
ZASCA 93
(9 June 2017)
[5]
2018
(9) BCLR 1067 (CC)
[6]
2014
(3) SA 189(GJ)
[7]
At
para 16 supra
[8]
2002
(6) SA 150
(C)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Sibanye Gold Limited and Others v Valuation Appeal Board for Randwest City Local Municipality and Others (2022/043793) [2025] ZAGPJHC 159 (18 February 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 159High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Sibanye Gold (Pty) Ltd v Bele and Others (005076/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 885 (2 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 885High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Sibanye Gold Limited and Others v Valuation Appeal Board Rand West City Local Municipality and Others (2022/043793) [2024] ZAGPJHC 877 (9 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 877High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Sibanye Stillwater Limited v Dovetail Properties (Pty) Limited (00127-2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 226 (6 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 226High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Sibanye Stillwater Limited v Dovetail Properties (Pty) Limited (00127/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 197 (6 February 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 197High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar