Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 643South Africa
Abedair Aviation Limited and Another v National Airways Corporation Pty Ltd (2022/027413) [2025] ZAGPJHC 643 (26 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Abedair Aviation Limited and Another v National Airways Corporation Pty Ltd (2022/027413) [2025] ZAGPJHC 643 (26 June 2025)
Abedair Aviation Limited and Another v National Airways Corporation Pty Ltd (2022/027413) [2025] ZAGPJHC 643 (26 June 2025)
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sino date 26 June 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2022-027413
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
DATE 27 June 2025
In
the matter between:
BEFORE
THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE, AUCAMP AJ
ABEDAIR
AVIATION LIMITED
First Applicant
ADRIAN
WILCOX
Second Applicant
And
NATIONAL
AIRWAYS CORPORATION (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
[1]
The parties on 18 August 2011, concluded an Aircraft Lease Agreement,
the first lease agreement, in terms of which the
respondent agreed to
lease to the first applicant an aircraft for contract leasing and
charter operations to be conducted under
the first applicant’s
Air Operators certificate in Kenya. For present purposes the first
lease agreement provided that (a)
any and all disputes between the
parties would be governed by the relevant and applicable South
African laws, (b) any and all disputes
would be adjudicated in the
appropriate courts of law in South Africa and (c) the parties
irrevocably submitted themselves to the
jurisdiction of the relevant
and applicable South African courts (“
the jurisdiction
provisions
”).
[2]
The first applicant failed to adhere to its payment obligations owing
to the respondent in respect of the first lease
agreement, more
specifically as at 24 May 2013, the first applicant owed the
respondent an amount of US$ 204,421.08 consisting
of arrear rental
(US$ 197,648.70) and interest (US$ 3,898.19) (“
the first
lease debt
”).
[3]
At a subsequent meeting between the parties, the second applicant on
behalf of the first respondent acknowledged the first
applicant’s
indebtedness. The parties agreed that a new lease agreement would be
concluded together with a settlement agreement
and acknowledgement of
debt (“
the first settlement agreement
”).
The respondent in turn, agreed to pass a credit to the first
applicant in the amount of US$ 64,500, conditional upon (a)
payment
of the balance of the first lease debt in two instalments of
US$67,000 each, (b) all other arrears remain due and payable
and (c)
the conclusion of a new lease agreement (“
the second
lease agreement
”).
[4]
The intended settlement agreement and acknowledgement of debt, a
written copy thereof, was not signed by the parties,
however the
second lease agreement was signed on 30 June 2013. As in the previous
instance, the second lease agreement contained
the jurisdiction
provisions.
[5]
The first applicant on 28 June 2013 paid an amount of US$50,000 as
part payment of the first instalment of US$67,000 in
respect of first
lease debt. The applicants further agreed to settling the balance of
the first lease debt and a further US$17,00
was paid on 8 July 2013,
leaving the balance of US$ 67,000.
[6]
The first applicant, therefore and in breach of the first settlement
agreement failed to make payment of the second instalment
of
US$67,000. Equally, and in breach of the second lease agreement, the
first applicant failed to maintain the agreed upon rental
instalments.
[7]
The first applicant on 16 August 2013, admitted its indebtedness and
offered to resolve the non-payment by having offered
to purchase the
aircraft. As at 30 May 2014, the first applicant owed the respondent
US$ 318,924.46. The respondent presented the
first applicant with a
first amendment to the second lease agreement together with a written
acknowledgement of debt. Both the
amendment and the acknowledgement
of debt was not signed by the first applicant however a payment of
US$40,000 was made on 10 September
2014.
[8]
The parties on 30 June 2015, concluded the second settlement
agreement and acknowledgment of debt (“
the second
settlement agreement
”) recording that as at 1 June 2014
the first applicant’s collective indebtedness calculated to an
amount of US$ 588,524,00.
Simultaneously with the conclusion of the
second settlement agreement, the second applicant bound himself as
surety and co-principal
debtor in respect of the first applicant’s
liabilities owing towards the respondent. As in the previous
instances, both the
second settlement agreement and the deed of
suretyship contained the jurisdiction provisions.
[9]
The first applicant on 27 August 2015 again re-affirmed the first
applicant’s indebtedness owing to the respondent
and a sale
agreement in respect of the aircraft was concluded on 18 November
2015. The actual sale was concluded on 14 March 2016.
[10]
On 21 January 2016, the respondent confirmed that, taking into
account the purchase price paid by the first applicant
that the
balance owing needed to be dealt with in terms of a further
acknowledgement of debt. The balance owing to the respondent
on 18
March 2016, calculated to an amount of US$ 548,940.00. As in previous
instances, the respondent offered to pass a credit
in favour of the
first applicant in the amount of USS 333,940.00, on condition that
the amount of US$ 215,000.00 was paid by the
first applicant. A
further settlement agreement and acknowledgement of debt recording
the amount of US$ 215,000.00 was presented
to the first applicant for
signature on 22 August 2016, however it would seem that once the sale
of the aircraft was concluded,
the first applicant lost all interest
in settling its indebtedness with the respondent. The referred to
settlement agreement and
acknowledgement of debt was not signed by
and/or on behalf of the first applicant. Equally, the referred to
amount was not paid,
this notwithstanding subsequent undertakings
made by the first respondent on 2 March 2017 and 27 July 2017.
[11]
The respondent on 26 November 2018 obtained judgement by default
against the first and second applicants, jointly and
severally, in
the following terms:
(a) The deed of
suretyship, a copy of which is annexed as FA28, to the applicant’s
founding affidavit is rectified by
the deletion of the word “Debtor”
and the substitution thereof with the word “Surety”.
(b) Judgement is
granted against the first and second respondents jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved
as follows:
(i) payment of the
amount of US$ 215,000.00 or the South African Rand equivalent as at
the date of payment;
(j) payment of US$
48,277.98 of the South African Rand equivalent as at the date of
payment;
(k) interest on the
amount of US$ 215,000 as at the rate of 12% per annum from 2 October
2018 to date of payment; and
(l) costs of suit
to the attorney and client scale.
(“
the
judgement
”)
[12]
The applicants make application for an order in the following terms:
(a) It is declared
that the judgement is a nullity, alternatively set aside.
(b) In the
alternative, the judgement is rescinded and the applicants are
directed to file their answering affidavit(s) or
notices in terms of
rule 6(5)(d)(iii) of the Uniform Rules of Court, if so advised, to
the respondent’s application within
a period of 15 days from
date of this order.
(c) Costs.
[13]
The application is made with the advancement of legal grounds or
points only. The applicants do not place any fact, material
to this
application, in dispute and instead adopted the approach that even on
the respondent’s version, as presented to Modiba
J on 26
November 2018, that there were several legal challenges or flaws to
the respondent’s case, and as such that the relief
claimed
should be granted. The applicants did not challenge any of the
material factual allegations contained in the founding affidavit
of
the respondent.
[14]
The application is premised on the trite principle that a judgment
granted by a court lacking in jurisdiction to have
received the
application and grant the judgement, constitutes a nullity, and does
not require to be set aside. Alternatively, the
applicants approach
this court, on the same facts, to rescind the judgement in terms of
Rule 42(1)(a) alternatively in the common
law. Consequently, this
court does not concern itself with considering a
bona fide
defence.
[15]
The issues for consideration therefore are:
(a) the
jurisdiction or lack thereof of the court
a quo
; and
(b) whether the
rectification of the deed of suretyship concerning the second
applicant was legally competent.
[16]
The applicants, also raised issues of prescription and the court
a
quo
having received inadmissible evidence in that the
confirmatory affidavits of certain key witnesses of the respondent,
were allegedly
not presented to court. These issues were not
seriously pursued, both in the applicants’ heads of argument as
well as during
the argument itself, however, from the papers it is
clear that there are no merits to these grounds. Instead, the issues
for consideration
are those listed in 15.1 and 15.2 above.
JURISDICTION
[17]
The application is primarily brought on the grounds that the court
having granted the judgement, lacked the requisite
jurisdiction in
that the applicants (a) having been
peregrini
before Modiba J
and (b) the applicants not having had any moveable or immovable
property in South African that is capable of attachment
to found
jurisdiction. This state of affairs appear to be common cause between
the parties.
[18]
The applicant in its founding papers before Modiba J, provided the
court with an extensive and detailed account of the
relationships
between the parties, the various discussions and/or meetings and the
agreements subsequently, concluded flowing from
the said exchanges.
The founding affidavit, for present purposes under the heading:
“PURPOSE OF THIS APPLICATION”,
provides a summary of the
respondent’s case, i.e paragraphs 7.1 to 7.13. The section
thereafter is followed, under the heading
“JURISDICTION”
by certain allegations relating to the jurisdiction of the court. In
paragraph 11 of the respondent’s
founding affidavit, the
respondent purports to place reliance on the second settlement
agreement and the first suretyship to establish
jurisdiction. The
applicants in this application suggest that the respondent in answer
to this application attempts to establish
a ground different to the
one relied upon before Modiba J.
[19]
I don’t believe that the applicants are correct in their
assessment of the respondent’s case, however, for
the reasons
advanced herein, I am not convinced that anything turns on the
objection raised by the applicants.
[20]
The resolution of this issue, is to be found in the respondent’s
cause of action. The applicants seek to confine
the cause of action
to the settlement agreement and the first deed of suretyship. I have
some sympathy for the approach adopted
by the applicants. The
founding affidavit contains some rather clumsy allegations which in
isolation can be interpreted to have
a completely different meaning
to when one considers the meaning with reference to the entire
founding affidavit. That being said,
on my reading of the founding
affidavit, the respondent’s cause of action is one of arrear
rentals and ancillary charges.
These amounts originate from the
various lease agreements and not from settlement agreements and/or
acknowledgement of debt documents.
The latter documents merely serve
as evidence to establish the indebtedness, but not the cause of
action.
[21]
The arrear rentals effectively are detailed in a series of events,
commencing with the conclusion of the first lease
agreement and
ultimately culminating in the conclusion of the sale of the aircraft,
the second settlement agreement and the deed
of suretyship. The first
applicant effectively had a running account with the respondent.
[22]
The establishment of respondent’s cause of action is relevant
for present purposes as the court’s jurisdiction
should be
determined with reference to the cause of action and not on an
isolated clumsy allegation, which if read against the
entire
affidavit, is clearly demonstrated to be inaccurate.
[23]
Jurisdiction is
determined with reference to the allegations in the pleadings and not
by the substantive merits of the case.
[1]
In paragraph 110 of the respondent’s founding affidavit, it is
alleged that:
“
In
terms of the various Agreements mentioned above and taking into
consideration the Aircraft Sale Agreement, the arrear amount
due and
owing to the Applicant by the first respondent is US$ 215,000. This
amount is due, owing and payable by the first respondent
in terms of
the Second Settlement Agreement and due, owing and payable by the
Second Respondent to the Applicant in terms of the
Deed of
Suretyship.”
[24]
Equally, it is to be noted that the settlement agreement, does not
provide for any form of novation.
[25]
A lessor claiming arrear
rental must allege (a) the contract, (b) fulfilment of the lessor’s
duties, and (c) non-payment of
rent.
[2]
[26]
It is common cause that both the second settlement agreement and the
deed of suretyship contain the jurisdiction provisions.
Equally, both
the second settlement agreement and the deed of suretyship, provide
for the appointment by the applicants of a “Process
Agent”,
in South Africa, more specifically, with an address (chosen
domicilium) within the jurisdiction of this court. The
parties
further expressly agreed that the purpose of the appointment of the
process agent is to allow for service of
inter alia
of all
process on him / her on behalf of the first and second applicants.
[27]
South African courts
derive personal jurisdiction primarily from common law principles, as
the statutory provisions, section 21
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013, (“
the
Act
”
)
[3]
is deliberately non-exhaustive. Under common law, a South African
High Court normally acquires jurisdiction over a
peregrinus
(
a
foreign person or entity with no domicile or property in South
Africa
)
only by effectiveness: traditionally by arresting the person or
attaching local assets to found jurisdiction. The rationale is
to
ensure any judgment can be effectively enforced.
[4]
In
Ewing
McDonald & Co Ltd v M&M Products Co
,
[5]
for example, the court held that a High Court could only take
cognizance of a foreign defendant if arrest or attachment took place.
[28]
However, since
Bid
Industrial Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Strang and Another
(
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development, Third Party
)
,
[6]
the common law has been developed to relax this rule when
arrest/attachment is impractical. In
Bid
International Holdings, supra,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal, (“
the
SCA
”
),
held that requiring arrest of a foreign defendant was
unconstitutional and should be replaced by practical expedients.
Where
attachment is possible, it still remains available, but where
it is not, jurisdiction is acquired by serving the foreign defendant
within South Africa
and
ensuring a sufficient
nexus between the dispute and the court’s territory. As Howie J
put it: “
it
will suffice to empower the court to take cognisance of the suit if
the defendant were served with the summons while in South
Africa and,
in addition, there were an adequate connection between the suit and
the area of jurisdiction of the South African court
concerned
”
.
[7]
The “
strongest
connection
”
is
often that the cause of action arose within the court’s
jurisdiction.
[8]
[29]
As a consequence, absent
statutory exception, jurisdiction over a
peregrine
requires
either a traditional ground (
domicile,
incola status, or connection through contract/performance in South
Africa
)
or a practical expedient i.e in-person service or consent by the
defendant.
[9]
If neither exists,
the court lacks jurisdiction. The underlying policy – the
doctrine of effectiveness – remains that
any judgment must have
a realistic prospect of enforcement.
[10]
[30]
Parties to a contract may
include a choice-of-law clause (e.g. “
South
African law applies
”
)
and a forum-selection or jurisdiction clause (“
all
disputes to be adjudicated in South African courts; the parties
submit to South African jurisdiction
”
).
Such clauses are generally valid as agreements on procedural matters.
South African courts will give effect to a clear contractual
submission to their jurisdiction, but subject to the
constitutional/public-policy principle that jurisdiction cannot be
entirely
ousted.
[11]
[31]
In practice, a jurisdiction clause is treated as evidence of consent
– a
prorogation of jurisdiction
– but it does not
by itself automatically oust other jurisdictional rules. If the
clause designates South African courts,
it constitutes the
defendant’s agreement to be sued in South Africa. But for
jurisdiction to be vested, the court must still
satisfy the same
competence requirements (
residence/service/performance
). Also,
where a foreign defendant explicitly or tacitly agrees, the court
considers that consent in addition to any statutory or
common-law
ground.
[32]
A jurisdiction clause
alone cannot establish personal jurisdiction over a foreign defendant
with no presence or assets in South
Africa. In
Veneta
Mineraria Spa v Carolina Collieries (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation
)
,
[12]
both plaintiff and defendant were
peregrini
and the court held that
mere submission (“
prorogation
”
)
did not suffice: One or more of the traditional grounds of
jurisdiction must also be present. In other words, where a foreign
defendant consents but no legal link exists (
no
residence, no assets, no local performance
),
the consent alone cannot clothe the court with competence.
[33]
This principle has been
repeatedly affirmed. In
Jamieson
v Sabingo
[13]
a defendant who formally
consented to jurisdiction after summons had been served was held
sufficient basis for jurisdiction because
the plaintiff was
incola
(resident) in South
Africa. The SCA noted that
Veneta
’
s
rule “while wide enough to cover cases where the plaintiff was
an
incola
,
was not intended to extend to cases where a peregrine defendant
consents to the jurisdiction of the court of which the plaintiff
is
an incola”. Thus, submission by itself did confer jurisdiction
in
American
Flag plc v Great African T-Shirt Corporation CC; Amrican Flag plc v
Great African T-Shirt Corporation CC
;
In re
Ex
parte Great African T-Shirt Corporation CC
[14]
as applied in
Hay
Management
Consultants
Ltd v P3 Management Consultants (Pty) Ltd
[15]
when
the plaintiff was South African, even if the foreign defendant had no
assets to attach.
[34]
However, where
both
parties are
peregrini
,
as in purely international disputes, courts have held that consent
alone is not enough absent a jurisdictional nexus. The SCA
recently
affirmed this in
Ingosstrakh
v Global Aviation
Aviation
Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
.
[16]
In
Ingosstrakh
,
a British insurer (defendant) and a German plaintiff were both
foreign; the insurer’s policy expressly selected South African
law and court. The insurer argued that submission was insufficient
because both parties were
peregrini.
The SCA observed that
under
Veneta
a peregrine defendant’s
submission alone “did not suffice to clothe [a] court…
with jurisdiction” absent
other grounds. Importantly,
Ingosstrakh
held that submission by a
foreign defendant
plus
a meaningful
jurisdictional link, i.e that the insurance contract was concluded in
Johannesburg was sufficient to assume jurisdiction.
[35]
Mr Tshikila, counsel for
the applicants, argues that the purported submission to “courts”
in South Africa, with reference
to
Veneta
supra
,
is insufficient to establish jurisdiction in respect of a specific
court. The submission is correct, however it fails to take
into
account the further dicta expressed in Veneta
supra
,
relating to the further connecting jurisdictional factors, i.e that
the respondent is an
incola
to the jurisdiction of
this court and / or the appointment of the process agent,
establishing a chosen domicilium
citandi
et executandi
within
the jurisdiction of this court. In any event, Mr Hollander for the
respondent, correctly submits that the appointment of
a chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
address
within a particular jurisdiction, is sufficient to confirm
jurisdiction on that court.
[17]
[36]
Consequently, and on the common cause grounds, alternatively grounds
that are not disputed, the respondent established
that the applicants
had consented to the South African jurisdiction.
RECTIFICATION
[37]
The deed of suretyship,
inter alia
provides as follows:
“
Made by and
between
ADRIAN WILCOX
A major Male, Director of
the Debtor UK Passport Number 5[…] and currently residing at
Plot 214/792, Naivasha Avenue, Muthaiga,
Nairobi, KENYA. (
Hereinafter
referred to as “the Surety
”)
And
NATIONAL AITWAYS
CORPORATION (PTY) LIMITED
…
I, ADRIAN WILCOX, a major
male, Director of the Principal Debtor, currently residing at
residing (sic) at Plot 214/792 ….
(
Hereinafter referred to
as “the Surety”
)
Hereby bind myself, in
favour of National Airways Corporation (Pty) Ltd, a company of
limited liability duly incorporated as such,
under registration
number 1945/019919/07 according to the laws of the Republic of South
Africa situated at … as surety and
co-principal debtor for the
due and punctual performance of all amounts which
ABEDAIR AVIATION LIMITED,
a company duly incorporated as such…. (Hereinafter referred to
as “the Principal Debtor”)
SIGNED at LANSERIA
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON 30 June 2015
For and on behalf of
NATIONAL AIRWAYS
CORPORATION (PTY) LTD
Signature
WITNESS
____________________________
Name of Signatory
____________________________
Designation of Signatory
SIGNED at NAIROBI on 30
June 2015
ADRIAN WILCOX
WITNESS
____________________________
Signature
____________________________
Name of Signatory
____________________________
Designation of
Signatory”
[18]
[38]
The respondent applied and obtained an order rectifying clause 10.7
of the deed of suretyship, which provides:
“
Process Agent
The
Debtor
shall agrees (sic) to maintain an agent for service of process in
Johannesburg South Africa. Such agent in Johannesburg shall be
….,
currently situated at Rosebank Law Chambers, 4 Glenhove Road, Melrose
Estate Johannesburg, 2196…. And any writ,
judgement or other
notice of legal process shall be sufficiently served on the
Debtor
if delivered to such agent at its address for the time being.
Debtor
undertakes not to revoke the authority to the above agent but of for
any reason, such agent no longer serves as agent of
Debtor
to receive service of process.
Debtor
shall
immediately appoint another agent and advise NAC thereof.”
[39]
The applicants, argue that the deed of suretyship is
void ab
initio
on account of the fact that it fails to comply with
section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act, Act 50 of 1956. The
conclusion
is founded, firstly, on the fact that the second
applicant, Adrian Wilcox, signed the deed of suretyship,
ex facie
the deed of suretyship, in his representative capacity as Chief
Executive Officer of the first applicant. Secondly, the applicants
rely on the respondent’s allegations contain in its founding
affidavit, more specifically, paragraphs 69 to 70 thereof in
terms of
which the intended rectification is motivated.
[40]
Section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act, Act 50 of 1956 provides
that the terms of the deed of suretyship must be
embodied in a
written document signed by and on behalf of the surety. The document
must further identify the creditor, the surety
and the principal
debtor.
[41]
Ex facie
the document, I am unable to conclude that the deed
of suretyship does not comply with the relevant provisions of the
General Law
Amendment Act, Act 50 of 1956. There is no dispute that
annexure FA28 to the respondent’s founding affidavit
constitutes
a written document containing the terms and conditions of
the intended deed of suretyship. The creditor, the principal debtor
and
the debtor are all clearly identified in the said annexure. The
only bone of contention remaining as far as the applicants are
concerned is the description of the second applicant when he appended
his signature to the deed of suretyship, i.e. Chief Executive
Officer. It is not denied that the signature is indeed that of the
second applicant. As a consequence, I am of the view that the
deed of
suretyship was signed by and on behalf of the second applicant as
surety. It equally follows that the deed of suretyship
fully complies
with the relevant provisions of the General Law Amendment Act, Act 50
of 1956.
[42]
To accept the applicants’ submissions on this issue would
require of me to disregard the express provisions of
the deed of
suretyship as well as the fact that the first applicant, in the
settlement agreement had already appointed an agent.
On the
applicants’ version, the first applicant, in terms of deed of
suretyship bound itself to the respondent as surety
and co-principal
debtor, in respect of its own debt, an impossibility even on the
version and correctly so, of the applicants.
The conclusions which
the applicant seek this court to make, seems to me a bride too far to
cross.
[43]
A suretyship agreement
may be rectified if it otherwise complies with the statutory
requirements.
[19]
RELIEF
[44]
In the result I make the following order:
(a) The application
is dismissed.
(b) The applicants,
jointly and severally, the one paying, the other to be absolved, are
ordered to pay the respondent’s
costs, such costs to be taxed
on the attorney and client scale.
S AUCAMP
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
DELIVERED
:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e mail and publication
on CaseLines.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10h00
on
-27 June
2025
HEARD
ON:
14 March 2025
DATE
OF JUDGEMENT:
27 June 2025
For
the Applicants:
Adv Tshikila
Fairbridges Wertheim
Becker
For
the Respondents:
Adv L Hollander
Darryl Furman &
Associates
[1]
Gcaba
v Minister for Safety and Security
2010 (1) BCLR 35
(CC);
2010 (1)
SA 328
(CC) para 75
[2]
Harms,
Amler’s
Precedent of Pleadings, Ninth Edition, Page 236
[3]
Section
21 of the Act provides that “A Division has jurisdiction over
all persons residing or being in, and in relation
to all causes
arising and all offences triable within, its area of jurisdiction
and all other matters of which it may according
to law take
cognizance, …”
[4]
Gross
v DM (2021/43212) [2024] ZAGPJHC 767;
2025 (2) SA 172
(GJ) (6 August
2024)
[5]
1991
(1) SA 252 (A)
[6]
2008
(3) SA 355 (SCA)
[7]
At
[56]
[8]
Gross
v DM
supra
[9]
Bid
Industrial Holdings
supra
[10]
Gros
v DM
supra
[11]
Bid Industrial Holdings
supra
[12]
1987
(4) SA 883 (A)
[13]
2002
(4) SA 49 (SCA)
[14]
2000
(1) SA 356 (W)
[15]
(439/2003)
[2004] ZASCA 116
; [2205]
3 All SA 119
(SCA);
2005 (2) SA 522
(SCA)
(30 November 2004)
[16]
(934/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 69
;
[2021] 3 All SA 316
(SCA);
2021 (6) SA 352
(SCA) (4
June 2021)
[17]
See
for example: Ex Parte Hay Management Consultants (Pty) Ltd
2000 (3)
SA 501
(W) at 508E-I; 511H - J
[18]
The
actual signatures do not appear from the extracted portion of the
deed of suretyship and quoted above. Save to state that
the deed of
suretyship was signed on behalf of the respondent by a certain JP
Fourie, in his capacity as Executive Director of
the respondent and
in respect of the purported surety, by the second applicant, in his
purported capacity as Chief Executive
Officer of the first
applicant.
[19]
Intercontinental
Exports (Pty) Ltd v Fowles
[1999] 2 All SA 304
(A);
1999 (2) SA 1045
(SCA); Tesven CC v SA Bank of Athens
[1999] 4 All SA 396
(A),
2000
(1) SA 268
(SC)
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