Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 415South Africa
SA Sportsbook (Pty) Limited t/a Yesplay v K.P and Another (2025/034789) [2025] ZAGPJHC 415 (2 May 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – urgent application for provisional sequestration of respondents – demonstrated by respondents that the existence of the debt is disputed on bona fide and reasonable grounds – therefore, they have successfully raised a complete defence to the sequestration application – this is fatal to applicant’s cause –
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 415
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## SA Sportsbook (Pty) Limited t/a Yesplay v K.P and Another (2025/034789) [2025] ZAGPJHC 415 (2 May 2025)
SA Sportsbook (Pty) Limited t/a Yesplay v K.P and Another (2025/034789) [2025] ZAGPJHC 415 (2 May 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_415.html
sino date 2 May 2025
FLYNOTES:
INSOLVENCY
– Sequestration –
Without
prejudice correspondence –
Unequivocal
admission of liability required – No such unequivocal
admissions are made in communications – Communiques
simply
privileged without prejudice missives aimed at settling disputes –
No admissions of liability or insolvency
– Rendered
inadmissible as evidence of acts of insolvency – Claim was
unliquidated – Bona fide and reasonable
dispute raised to
alleged debt – Application struck from roll –
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
,
ss 8(c)
, (e), and (g).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
(1)
Not
reportable
(2)
not
of
intrest to other judges
case
NO
:
2025-034789
DATE
:
2 May
2025
In the matter between:
S
A SPORTSBOOK (PTY) LIMITED t/a YESPLAY
Applicant
and
K
P
First Respondent
J
P
Second Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
SA Sportsbook t/a YesPlay v
P and Another (2025-034789)
[2025] ZAGPJHC ---
(2 May
2025)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
29 April 2025
Delivered:
2 May 2025 – This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 2 May 2025.
Summary:
Civil procedure – urgent application for
provisional sequestration of respondents – demonstrated by
respondents that
the existence of the debt is disputed on
bona
fide
and reasonable grounds –
therefore, they have successfully raised a complete defence to the
sequestration application –
this is fatal to applicant’s
cause –
‘
Without
prejudice’ correspondence generally inadmissible –
admissible in sequestration applications if the debtor an
‘unequivocal admission’ of its liability to the creditor
or ‘admitted his/her insolvency’ – if not,
as
in
casu
, such communications are
privileged from disclosure as being between parties undertaken with a
view to a settlement of their disputes
–
Application to have
struck portions of founding affidavit in terms of Uniform Rule of
Court 6(15) – all of these allegations
are averments and
conclusions relating to ‘without prejudice’ and ‘without
admission of liability’ settlement
discussions between the
parties – therefore, case made out by respondents to have those
portions of the affidavit struck
out – application granted –
Urgent application should
also fail due to lack of urgency – any urgency self-created –
Urgent application struck
from the roll for lack of urgency.
ORDER
(1)
The first and second respondents’
interlocutory application dated 11 April 2025 to strike out certain
portions of and certain
annexures to the applicant’s founding
affidavit, succeeds and is hereby granted with costs.
(2)
The applicant shall pay the first and
second respondents’ costs of the said interlocutory
application, including the costs
of Counsel on scale ‘C’
of the applicable tariff provided for in the Uniform Rules of Court.
(3)
The applicant’s urgent application be
and is hereby struck from the urgent court roll for lack of urgency.
(4)
The applicant shall pay the first and the
second respondents’ costs of this urgent application, such
costs to include Counsel’s
charges on scale ‘C’ of
the tariff applicable in terms of the Uniform Rules of Court.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
The applicant (‘YesPlay’)
applies, on an urgent basis, for the provisional sequestration of the
joint estate of the
first and the second respondents, who are married
to each other in community of property. YesPlay is an online betting
operator,
duly registered with and licensed by the Western Cape
Gambling and Racing Board. The YesPlay platform offers a variety of
means
in terms of which its customers may place bets online. YesPlay
customers can, by way of example, choose to place bets between
inter
alia
casino games, sports betting or
slots. The first respondent registered and created an account online
with YesPlay on or about 24
April 2022 and the second respondent
registered and created her account with YesPlay on 3 June 2024.
[2].
The applicant avers that the respondents
are indebted to it in the amount of no less than R6 075 903.42,
being the sum
total of amounts they actually received as a result of
a fraudulent exploitation of a system fault on its online betting
platform.
Following the discovery of the respondents’ alleged
fraudulent conduct, so it is contended by the applicants, the
respondents,
through their attorneys of record, made various full and
final settlement offers in an attempt to be released from this debt.
This
constitutes an act of insolvency, so the contention continues,
as contemplated in section 8(e) of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
(‘the
Insolvency Act&rsquo
;). Moreover, so the applicant
alleges, the respondents have admitted their inability to repay this
debt, which is also an act of
insolvency, as contemplated in
section
8(g)
of the said Act. And they have disposed of their property which
has or would have the effect of prejudicing their creditors, or
of
preferring one creditor above another, which action also constitutes
an act of insolvency as contemplated in section 8(c) of
the Act.
[3].
It may be apposite, at this juncture, to
cite the aforesaid provisions of the
Insolvency Act in
full to place
in context the issues in this urgent application.
Sections 8(c)
, (e)
and (g) and the other relevant provisions read as follows: -
‘
8
Acts of insolvency
A debtor commits an act
of insolvency –
… … …
(c)
if he makes or attempts to make any disposition of any of his
property which has or
would have the effect of prejudicing his
creditors or of preferring one creditor above another;
(d)
if he removes or attempts to remove any of his property with intent
to prejudice his creditors
or to prefer one creditor above another;
(e) if he
makes or offers to make any arrangement with any of his creditors for
releasing him wholly or partially from
his debts;
… … …
(g)
if he gives notice in writing to any one of his creditors that he is
unable to pay any of his
debts;
…
… …’
[4].
Section 9(1)
and
section 10
of the
Insolvency Act provides
as follows: -
‘
9
Petition for sequestration of estate
(1)
A creditor … who has a liquidated
claim for not less than [R100] … against a debtor who has
committed an act of insolvency,
or is insolvent, may petition the
court for the sequestration of the estate of the debtor.
… … …
10
Provisional sequestration
If the court to which the
petition for the sequestration of the estate of a debtor has been
presented is of the opinion that
prima facie
–
(a)
the petitioning creditor has established
against the debtor a claim such as is mentioned in subsection (1) of
section nine; and
(b)
the debtor has committed an act of
insolvency or is insolvent; and
(c)
there is reason to believe that it will be
to the advantage of creditors of the debtor if his estate is
sequestrated,
it may make an order
sequestrating the estate of the debtor provisionally.’
[5].
The applicant’s claim for the
aforesaid sum is a claim for contractual damages based on an alleged
breach of the ‘gambling
agreement’ concluded between the
parties, which incorporated expressly by reference the general terms
and conditions to which
the respondents bound themselves when they
signed up on the YesPlay platform. Alternatively, so the applicant
contends, the respondents
were unjustly enriched in the said amount
as a result of a
iustus error
.
[6].
The alleged fraudulent and unlawful conduct
on the part of the respondents, and the breaches of contract,
allegedly occurred during
the period from May 2024 to August 2024,
and it was in the form of the respondents taking advantage of an
‘unintended flaw’
in the so-called ‘Free Spins’
feature on the YesPlay platform.
[7].
The respondents deny, and have all along
denied, any unlawful or fraudulent conduct as alleged by YesPlay.
They maintain that, at
all times, on their respective accounts, both
of which accounts were verified by YesPlay, they engaged in a variety
of betting
games / online slot machines and did so in accordance with
the rules of said respective games and with the intention of
gambling,
in the hope of receiving a winning or winnings. They never
defrauded, nor have they ever attempted to defraud YesPlay by abusing
the ‘flaw’ in the platform. All they did, so the
respondents contend, was to do what one does when gambling in the
hope of winning more than one puts into a game.
[8].
The respondents’ case is that the
fact that YesPlay's system had an ‘unintended flaw’ was
not known to them nor
did they exploit the flaw. They simply engaged
in standard gameplay on YesPlay's platform, winning and receiving
payouts legitimately.
At no point did they act outside normal user
behaviour or deliberately manipulate the system. The platform's
failure to prevent
such occurrences, so the respondents contend,
reflects on its own technical and operational controls rather than on
any wrongdoing
by the respondents. In sum, the respondents submit
that they cannot be held responsible for a defect in the platform of
the applicant,
who is in fact the one that should take responsibility
for the flaw and its consequences.
[9].
The respondents furthermore contend that
the applicant’s reliance on what is clearly ‘without
prejudice’ communiques
between the parties aimed at settling
the dispute between them, is misplaced. Such correspondence, so the
respondents’ argument
goes, is inadmissible and should be
struck out. These ‘without prejudice’ communiques, in any
event do not demonstrate
that they, so the respondents argue, are
factually insolvent nor that they have committed acts of insolvency.
It simply evidences
an attempt by the respondents – without in
any way admitting any liability for any amounts owing to the
applicant –
to settle, by way of compromise, a dispute between
the parties with a view to avoiding costly and time-consuming
litigation.
[10].
In sum, the respondents oppose the
sequestration application on the basis that their indebtedness to the
applicant is reasonably
disputed on
bona
fide
grounds. The alleged indebtedness,
so the respondents contend, is not based on the existence of a
liquid, undisputed debt and a
recognised creditor-debtor
relationship. The respondents therefore argue, in conclusion on this
point, that the applicant has neither
proven such a debt nor
established the existence of any lawful claim against them.
[11].
Therefore, in issue in this opposed urgent
sequestration application is whether the applicant has demonstrated
that the respondents
are undisputably indebted to it in the amount
claimed. Put another way, the question to be considered by this Court
is whether
the respondents indebtedness to the applicant is
reasonably disputed on
bona fide
grounds.
[12].
These issues are to be decided against the
factual backdrop which are dealt with in the paragraphs which follow.
[13].
As I have already indicated
supra
,
the respondents deny that they are indebted to the applicant in the
amount claimed or in any sum whatsoever. They deny any fraudulent
conduct on their part or that they acted in breach of the gambling
agreement concluded between the parties.
[14].
The applicant contends that the total
amount of the ‘winnings’ was not due to the respondents.
This sum – whether
received by fraud or in error or received in
breach of the agreement or outside of the agreement altogether –
falls to be
repaid by the respondents.
[15].
In my view, the facts in the matter are not
as clear cut as the applicant would have the Court believe. In that
regard, it cannot,
in my view, be said with any conviction that the
version of the respondents that they were simply doing what one does
when gambling
and hoping to make some money in the process, can and
should be rejected out of hand as being untenable and far-fetched.
Far from
it, it appears to me that there is a ring of truth to this
claim in that the respondents’ understanding of what was
happening
is the very definition of gambling. And once it is accepted
that there is no indebtedness to the applicant by the respondents,
which is not reasonably disputed on
bona
fide
grounds, the rest of the
applicant’s case in this urgent application falls flat. That
would include the applicant’s
case based on the alleged acts of
insolvency relating to the settling of the respondents’
indebtedness the first respondent’s
father by the transfer of
their immovable property to him. The point is that, if it is accepted
that it has not been demonstrated
that the respondents are indebted
to the applicant for the sum in excess of R6 million, the transfer of
the immovable property
to the father cannot be said to be a voidable
preference under
section 29
of the
Insolvency Act at
a time when the
respondents were insolvent. It was therefore not an act of insolvency
under
section 8(c).
[16].
As for the ‘without prejudice’
correspondence, which, according to the applicant, provides further
evidence of the respondents
preferring creditors, I find myself in
agreement with the respondents’ contention that these
communiques are simply privileged
‘without prejudice’
missives aimed at settling disputes, which do not even begin to admit
liability to the applicant
of the amounts claimed by it. One needs to
look only at the contents of these letters to understand that
contextually and textually
the intention of the respondents is not to
make an admission of their liability to pay to the applicant the
amounts claimed. Nor
do these communications contain statements
demonstrating that the respondents are unable to pay their debts.
[17].
As an example of the aforegoing, a letter
dated 22 October 2024 from the respondents’ attorneys, Barter
McKellar, to the attorneys
for the applicants, in the relevant part
reads as follows: -
‘
(8)
In addition to the above, it is important to note that [the
respondents] do not have access to
the total winnings, amounting to
R6 075 903.42 (six million, seventy-five thousand, nine
hundred and three rand and forty-two
cents). [The respondents] have
utilised a portion of these funds to settle debts and alleviate the
significant financial pressures
brought on by the current high cost
of living crisis affecting most South Africans.
(9)
Keeping in line with the above sentiment,
[the respondents] hereby offer the following revised settlement
offer, in full and final
settlement of any and all claims,
without
prejudice and off the record
:
(9.1)
your client retains the Balances (as previously defined);
(9.2)
[the respondents] make a payment of R3 000 000 (three
million rand) to [the applicant] in full
and final settlement of any
and all claims between the parties, paid as follows:
(9.2.1) R2 000 000
(two million rand) paid on or before the close of business on 31
October 2024; and
(9.2.2) R1 000 000
(one million rand) paid by way of monthly instalments of R15 000
(fifteen thousand rand) per month
starting on 30 November 2024;
(9.3)
the terms of such a settlement are reduced
to writing between the parties.’ (Emphasis added).
[18].
The
applicant contends that it is entitled to present the evidence
relating to these ‘without prejudice’ communiques
on the
basis of
Absa
Bank Ltd v Hammerle Group
[1]
,
in which the Supreme Court of Appeal (per Mbha JA) held as follows at
para 13:
‘
[13]
It is true that, as a general rule, negotiations between parties
which are undertaken with a view to
a settlement of their disputes
are privileged from disclosure. This is regardless of whether or not
the negotiations have been
stipulated to be without prejudice.
However, there are exceptions to this rule. One of these exceptions
is that an offer made,
even on a 'without prejudice' basis, is
admissible in evidence as an act of insolvency. Where a party
therefore concedes insolvency,
as the respondent did in this case,
public policy dictates that such admissions of insolvency should not
be precluded from sequestration
or winding-up proceedings, even if
made on a privileged occasion. The reason for the exception is that
liquidation or insolvency
proceedings are a matter which by its very
nature involves the public interest. A
concursus
creditorum
is created and the trading
public is protected from the risk of further dealing with a person or
company trading in insolvent circumstances.
It follows that any
admission of such insolvency, whether made in confidence or
otherwise, cannot be considered privileged. This
is explained in the
words of Van Schalkwyk J in
Absa Bank
Ltd v Chopdat
, when he said:
“
(A)s
a matter of public policy, an act of insolvency should not always be
afforded the same protection which the common law privilege
accords
to settlement negotiations.
A creditor who undertakes
the sequestration of a debtor's estate is not merely engaging in
private litigation; he initiates a juridical
process which can have
extensive and indeed profound consequences for many other creditors,
some of whom might be gravely prejudiced
if the debtor is permitted
to continue to trade whilst insolvent. I would therefore be inclined
to draw an analogy between the
individual who seeks to protect from
disclosure a criminal threat upon the basis of privilege and the
debtor who objects to the
disclosure of an act of insolvency on the
same basis.”
In the final analysis,
the learned judge said at 1094F:
“
In
this case the respondent has admitted his insolvency. Public policy
would require that such admission should not be precluded
from these
proceedings, even if made on a privileged occasion.”
[14]
Moreover, in this case
the unequivocal admissions of liability by
the respondent
were not even made in the course of any
negotiations, but in response to a letter of demand for payment of
the arrear instalments
due in terms of the loan agreement. The court
a quo accordingly erred in granting the application to strike out
reference to the
respondent's admissions of liability.
[15]
The further consequence of my finding
that the respondent
unequivocally admitted its liability to the appellant of the amount
claimed in the letter of 24 June 2011
, is that the plea of
prescription cannot be sustained. This is because such admission
would have interrupted the running of prescription,
if any.’
(Emphasis added)
[19].
The takeaway from this SCA authority, from
which I have quoted extensively, is that in the ‘without
prejudice’ correspondence
the debtor should have made an
‘unequivocal admission’ of its liability to the creditor
or should have ‘admitted
his/her insolvency’.
In
casu
, none such unequivocal admissions
are made by the respondents in the communications, which means that
the default position is reverted
to, that being that negotiations
between parties which are undertaken with a view to a settlement of
their disputes are privileged
from disclosure.
[20].
In sum, I find myself in agreement with the
contention on behalf of the respondents that they have raised a
complete defence to
the sequestration application in that it has been
demonstrated by them that the existence of the debt is disputed on
bona fide
and reasonable grounds. Moreover, the applicant’s claim is, by
all accounts, not a ‘liquidated claim’, but is
in fact an
‘unliquidated’ claim for damages for breach of contract
or for alleged unjust enrichment, which means that
the applicant is
required to prove the quantum of such damages or the value of such
alleged enrichment before it can be said, with
certainty, that the
respondents are indebted to it for the amount claimed or for any
other sum.
[21].
As
was held by Rogers J in
Gap
Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC
[2]
,
the rule that winding-up proceedings should not be resorted to as a
means of enforcing payment of a debt, the existence of which
is
bona
fide
disputed on reasonable grounds, is part of the broader principle that
the court’s processes should not be abused. The Court
went on
and held as follows: -
‘
Liquidation
proceedings are not intended as a means of deciding claims which are
genuinely and reasonably disputed. The rule is
generally known as the
“Badenhorst rule”, after one of the leading cases on the
subject,
Badenhorst v Northern
Construction Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1956
(2) SA 346
(T) at 347H – 348C. A distinction is thus drawn
between factual disputes relating to the respondent’s liability
to
the applicant and disputes relating to the other requirements for
liquidation. At the provisional stage the other requirements must
be
satisfied on a balance of probabilities with reference to the
affidavits. In relation to the respondent’s liability, on
the
other hand, the question is whether the applicant’s claim is
disputed on reasonable and
bona fide
grounds; a court may reach this
conclusion, even though on a balance of probabilities (based on the
papers) the applicant’s
claim has been made out (
Payslip
Investment Holdings CC v Y2K Tec Ltd
2001 (4) SA 781
(C) at 783G – I). However, where the applicant
at the provisional stage shows that the debt
prima
facie
exists, the onus is on the
company to show that it is
bona fide
disputed on reasonable grounds (
Hülse-Reutter
and Another v HEG Consulting Enterprises (Pty) Ltd (Lane and Fey NNO
Intervening)
1998 (2) SA 208
(C) at
218D – 219C).’
[22].
Applying this authority
in
casu
, I am persuaded that the grounds
advanced by the respondents for their disputing the applicant’s
claims are not unreasonable.
I do not think that it is necessary for
the respondents at this juncture to adduce on affidavit, or
otherwise, the actual evidence
on which they would rely as a basis
for them disputing their indebtedness to the applicant.
[23].
For all of these reasons, I conclude that
the applicant’s sequestration application should fail.
[24].
There is another reason why the applicant’s
application should fail and that relates to the issue of urgency. The
first and
the second respondents also oppose the urgent application
on the grounds that the application is not urgent. In the event that
it is determined that there is any urgency, then it is submitted on
behalf of the respondents, that the urgency is entirely self-created.
[25].
It is contended on behalf of the
respondents that, if the applicant truly considered the respondents
‘without prejudice’
settlement offers during September /
October 2024 to be acts of insolvency, it has not explained why it
waited some five months
from receipt of said letters to launch this
urgent sequestration application. What is more is that the dispute
between the applicant
and the respondents arose as far back as August
2024.
[26].
It is so, as contended on behalf of the
respondents, that the applicant’s delay and conduct contradict
any claim of urgency
or that that applicant will not be afforded
substantial redress in due course. If the matter were truly urgent,
the applicant would
have approached the court at the first available
opportunity, rather than delaying.
[27].
I find myself in agreement with the
submissions on behalf of the first and the second respondents. The
simple fact of the matter
is that howsoever one views this matter the
applicant should have launched this application much sooner than it
actually did.
[28].
This Court has consistently refused urgent
applications in cases when the urgency relied-upon was clearly
self-created. Consistency
is important in this context as it informs
the public and legal practitioners that Rules of Court and Practice
Directives can only
be ignored at a litigant's peril. Legal certainty
is one of the cornerstones of a legal system based on the Rule of
Law.
[29].
For all of these reasons, I am not
convinced that the applicant has passed the threshold prescribed in
Rule 6(12)(b)
and I am of the view that the application ought to be
struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
[30].
The application therefore falls to be
struck from the roll with costs.
Respondents’
Application to Strike Out
[31].
There is one last issue which I need to deal with and that relates to
an interlocutory application
by the respondents to have struck out –
in terms of Uniform Rule of Court 6(15) – certain portions and
a number of
paragraphs of the applicant’s founding affidavit.
[32].
The respondents, in particular, apply for
an
order that the following paragraphs be struck out from the Founding
Affidavit dated 12 March 2025 as they are scandalous, vexatious,
irrelevant and constituted privileged correspondence sent by the
respondents without prejudice and off the record: paragraphs 10.1,
10.2, 10.3, 16.2, 40, 41, 41.1, 41.2, 42, 43, 44, 44.1, 44.2, 44.2.1,
44.2.2, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 62, and 66.1 of
the
founding affidavit, as well as annexures ‘FA3’ and ‘FA4’
to the said affidavit.
[33].
These paragraphs and the named annexures
relate almost exclusively to the negotiations between parties, which,
according to the
respondents, were undertaken with a view to a
settlement of the disputes or differences, and are therefore
privileged from disclosure.
[34].
For the reasons
referenced
supra
,
I am of the view that the said application should succeed. The simple
point is that most, if not all of the allegations which
the
respondents wish to have struck out, are averments and conclusions
relating to ‘without prejudice’ and ‘without
admission of liability’ settlement discussions between the
parties. I am persuaded that the respondents have made out a case
to
have those portions of the affidavit struck out.
[35].
Rule 6(15)
reads as
follows: -
‘
(15)
The court may on application order to be struck out from any
affidavit any matter which is scandalous, vexatious
or irrelevant,
with an appropriate order as to costs, including costs as between
attorney and client. The court may not grant the
application unless
it is satisfied that the applicant will be prejudiced if the
application is not granted.’
[36].
Accordingly, I
reiterate that the application to strike out certain paragraphs
should succeed with costs,
Order
[37].
In the result, I make the following order:
(1)
The first and second respondents’
interlocutory application dated 11 April 2025 to strike out certain
portions of and certain
annexures to the applicant’s founding
affidavit, succeeds and is hereby granted with costs.
(2)
The applicant shall pay the first and
second respondents’ costs of the said interlocutory
application, including the costs
of Counsel on scale ‘C’
of the applicable tariff provided for in the Uniform Rules of Court.
(3)
The applicant’s urgent application be
and is hereby struck from the urgent court roll for lack of urgency.
(4)
The applicant shall pay the first and the
second respondents’ costs of this urgent application, such
costs to include Counsel’s
charges on scale ‘C’ of
the tariff applicable in terms of the Uniform Rules of Court.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
29 April 2025
JUDGMENT DATE:
2 May 2025 –
Judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE APPLICANT:
A C Botha SC
INSTRUCTED BY:
HBGSchindlers
Attorneys, Melrose Arch, Johannesburg
FOR
THE FIRST AND SECOND RESPONDENTS:
K
Howard
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Barter
McKellar, Linden, Johannesburg
[1]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Hammerle Group
2015
(5) SA 215 (SCA).
[2]
Gap
Merchant Recycling CC v Goal Reach Trading 55 CC
2016
(1) SA 261
(WCC).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
E -Sport Entertainment (PTY) Ltd v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd: In re: South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Online Arena Enterprises (PTY) Ltd t/a ORENA.com and Others (34125/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 669 (7 September 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 669High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Esportif International SA (Pty) Ltd v Porter and Another (A5037/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 642 (6 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 642High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
NSR Sports and Education (Pty) Ltd t/a IAM 360 v Van Heerden and Another (2023-075730) [2024] ZAGPJHC 346 (3 April 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 346High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Hennops Sport (Pty) Ltd v Luhan Auto (Pty) Ltd (A52/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 953 (2 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 953High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
S.A.H. v S.B.H. (2025/038564) [2025] ZAGPJHC 538 (5 June 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 538High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar