Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 257South Africa
Tsie v Brenner and Others (4783-2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 257 (18 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tsie v Brenner and Others (4783-2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 257 (18 March 2024)
Tsie v Brenner and Others (4783-2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 257 (18 March 2024)
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sino date 18 March 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 4783/2020
1.
REPORTABLE: No
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
3.
REVISED: Yes
In
the matter between:
MODISAOTSILE
EDZARD TSIE
Applicant
(Registration
No. 1967-01032-07)
and
ELINOR
BRENNER
First
Respondent
LEWIS
GOLDEN
Second
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Third
Respondent
CREST
CAR HIRE
CC
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
C
BESTER AJ:
Summary:
Extinctive
Prescription – a
right
to claim performance under a contract becomes due according to the
terms or, if the contract is silent, within a reasonable
time, which
in appropriate circumstances, can be immediately. Wh
ere
a debtor refuses to perform after the debt becomes due according to
the terms of the contract, the failure to perform does not
constitute
a new debt unless the creditor cancels the contract, in which event,
a new debt is created comprising the right to claim
restitution
and/or damages which becomes due when the right of cancelation is
exercised. If the creditor does not exercise the
election and the
contractual relationship remains intact, the
breach
of contract does not create a new cause of action for specific
performance with a claim for specific performance remaining
one based
on the contents of the contract. Reliance on
section 12(2)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
must be specifically pleaded.
Introduction
[1]
The
applicant seeks an order authorising him to amend “
the
directorship of Crest Car Hire CC
”
to reflect him as a “
director
”
of the close corporation together with an order directing the first
respondent “
to
remove her name from the directorship of Crest Car Hire CC
”.
[1]
[2]
Although not
pleaded with a modicum of clarity, I will assume in favour of the
applicant that this relief was intended to refer
to the members
interest in Crest Car Hire.
[3]
He
further claims an order directing the third respondent not to accept
the first and final liquidation and distribution account
prepared and
submitted by the first and second respondents in their capacities as
the duly appointed executors of the late Ernst
Leon Brenner who
previously held the members interest in a Crest Car Hire.
[2]
The applicant also seeks an order declaring that “
the
agreement entered into between the parties is a valid agreement in
terms whereof the close corporation was purchased by the
Applicant
”.
[3]
The applicant in the final instance, seeks an order declaring that
the sale of business agreement included as its subject matter
the
close corporation that is Crest Car Hire.
[4]
The agreement referred to is a sale of business agreement concluded
between the applicant and Crest Car Hire in early 2013 to which
I
shall return below.
The
Facts
[4]
To understand the context within which the
relief is pursued, it is necessary to provide a brief overview of the
salient facts.
[5]
Crest Car Hire owned
and conducted a car rental business from certain premises situated in
Rockey Street, Yeoville, Johannesburg.
Brenner was the sole member of
Crest Car Hire and owned these premises in his personal capacity. The
applicant was in the employ
of Crest Car Hire for many years. Brenner
who was already of advanced age, developed a close relationship with
him, and when Brenner’s
health began to deteriorate, the
applicant expressed an interest to acquire the business of Crest Car
Hire. Brenner was prepared
to sell the business at a discounted price
to the applicant, presumably to reward a longstanding and loyal
employee.
[6]
The upshot was the
conclusion of a sale of business agreement on 24 January 2013 between
the applicant and Crest Car Hire in terms
of which the applicant
acquired the business of Crest Car Hire as a going concern inclusive
of all stock, assets and goodwill.
The purchase consideration
was R84 000.00 and there is no dispute that the applicant had paid
this sum in full.
[7]
Following the
conclusion of the sale of business agreement, the applicant operated
the business from the Rockey Street premises
which he rented from
Brenner without any obligation to pay rental in terms of an oral
agreement concluded with Brenner that required
the applicant to
assume the role of caretaker and collect rental from other tenants
situated on the premises. He was also required
to collect rental and
fulfil the role of caretaker in relation to the premises situated at
no. 76, Webb Street, Yeovile that was
registered in the name of Crest
Car Hire.
[8]
Brenner passed away
on 23 June 2015. The first and second respondents were appointed as
the executors of his deceased estate. The
first respondent was
his wife and the sole heir of his estate.
[9]
The status
quo
of the contractual regime agreed upon between the applicant and
Brenner continued after his death with the only difference that
Brenner had been replaced by the first and second respondents in
their capacity as executors. In July 2018, the first respondent
and
her son Jeffrey Brenner, learnt for the first time that the applicant
had been short paying the rental that he collected.
[10]
This led to the
termination of his mandate as caretaker of the Rockey Street premises
and no. 76, Webb Street while his authority
to collect rental was
also revoked. He was then required to pay a R1000.00 a month for the
use of the Rockey Street premises and
except for September and
October 2018, he made no further rental payments.
[11]
As the sole heir to
Brenner’s estate, the first respondent was bequeathed the
Rockey Street premises and his membership interest
in Crest Car Hire
which was transferred to the first respondent on 10 July 2018 when
the change in membership of Crest Car Hire
was officially reflected
for the first time in the records of the Companies and Intellectual
Property Commission.
[12]
The applicant
considered this to constitute an unlawful act. He explains himself as
follows in his founding affidavit:
a.
“
The
First Respondent has unlawfully amended the Founding Statement of the
close corporation and has now put her name as the sole
member and/or
directors of the said close corporation irrespective of the fact that
she knows down [sic] well that that I have
purchased the said close
corporation as a going concern including all its assets therein
”;
[5]
b.
“
The
Said First Respondent and the Second Respondent at the time they drew
the First and Final Liquidation and Distribution Account
in the
estate of the Late Mr Brenner they [sic] knew for a fact that the
close corporation was already purchased by me before the
death of Mr
Brenner and that the said close corporation was not an asset in the
estate of the late Mr Brenner
.”
[6]
[13]
The crux of his case
is that the applicant believes that he is entitled to the benefit of
the members interest in Crest Car Hire
as part of the subject under
the sale of business agreement entered with the close corporation in
January 2013.
[14]
The first and second
respondents opposed the application on various grounds including the
non-joinder of Crest Car Hire, the prescription
of the claim, raised
by way of a point
in
limine,
and on the basis that the interpretation of the sale of business
agreement did not support the relief.
Procedural
History
[15]
The applicant did not actively prosecute
the application and failed to deliver heads of argument in time. On 8
March 2022, the matter
came before Opperman J who ordered the
applicant to deliver his heads of argument by no later than 10 May
2022. He failed to do
so and took no further steps to prosecute the
application. His attorneys withdrew on 14 April 2023 but came on
record again on
7 November 2023, six days before the hearing was
scheduled to proceed on the opposed motion roll.
[16]
I allocated the matter for hearing on
Thursday 16 November 2023 and on 14 November 2023, the applicant
brought an application to
join Crest Car Hire to the proceedings.
When the matter was called, Ms Matome, who appeared for the
applicant, requested that the
matter be postponed
sine
die
to allow the first and second
respondents to deal with the joinder application.
[17]
Mr Hollander who appeared for the first and
second respondents as well as Crest Car Hire, met the application for
a postponement
by stating that his clients consented to the joinder
application and did not intend to file any further affidavits. He
recorded
that his clients were ready to proceed with the application
and anxious to finalise the proceedings which had been delayed since
their institution in 2020. He proposed that the applicant be afforded
an opportunity to deliver heads of argument which his clients
would
respond to whereafter judgment could be delivered without the need
for further argument.
[18]
After I had made an order joining Crest Car
Hire as the fourth respondent, the applicant found himself somewhat
off guard. Ms Matome
argued that a postponement was still necessary
as the applicant had not pleaded the material facts of his cause of
action against
Crest Car Hire.
[19]
Mr Hollander opposed a further postponement
of the matter on behalf of the first, second and Crest Car Hire on
the basis that not
only was there no basis to delay the matter any
longer, but no postponement application had been brought. It was not
clear what
further allegations the applicant wished to make against
Crest Car Hire when the issues in dispute were clear from the papers.
Ms Matome was not clear on what further submissions the applicant
wished to make.
[20]
Following further debate
with
counsel, Ms Matome wisely elected not to seek a further postponement
of the matter, which I was not inclined to entertain.
She advised
that her instructions were to instead allow the Court to decide the
application on the merits.
[21]
I directed the applicant to deliver his
heads of argument by 1 December 2023. The first, second and Crest Car
Hire were allowed
to deliver supplementary heads of argument by no
later than 15 December 2023 which they did.
Identification
of the Issue
[22]
In view of the approach, I adopt to the
matter, the application turns on whether the applicant’s claims
have prescribed which
is dispositive of the relief.
[23]
It is unnecessary, given the conclusion I
have come to concerning the issue of prescription, to consider
whether the applicant is
entitled to the relief on a proper
interpretation of the relevant provisions of the sale of business
agreement.
[24]
I shall assume for purposes of the
judgment, that his interpretation is the correct one and that the
s
ubject
of the sale includes the members interest of the close corporation
but I stress that it is not necessary for me to decide
the issue.
Prescription
[25]
The
applicant disputes that any part of the relief formulated in the
notice of motion constitutes a “
debt
”
for purposes of prescription.
[7]
[26]
It is for this reason necessary to first
determine if the claims set out in his notice of motion fall within
the purview of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
[27]
S
ection
10(1) of the
Prescription Act provides
that a “
debt
”
shall be extinguished after the lapse of the relevant prescriptive
period, which in the case of contractual debts is
three years (see
section 11(d)).
While a “
debt
”
is not defined in the statute, it traditionally carried a broad
meaning to include any obligation to do something or refrain
from
doing something.
[8]
[28]
The
Constitutional Court in
Makate
v Vodacom Limited
2016 4 SA 121
(CC) and
Off-Beat
Holiday Club v Sanbonani Holiday Spa Shareblock Limited
2017
(5) SA 9
(CC) curtailed the expansive meaning previously given to the
term in judgments like
Desai
NO v Desai and Others
1996 1 SA 141 (A)
[9]
where the term was interpreted to
convey
a wide and general meaning significantly broader than the payment of
money and included an obligation to do something or
refrain from
doing something. Jaftha J, writing for the majority in
Makate
,
criticised the broad interpretation adopted by the Appellate Division
in
Desai
on the basis that:
a.
it had the consequence that any
claim that required a person to either do or refrain from doing
something irrespective of the nature
of the obligation would fall
within the net of
section 10(1)
;
b.
a
constitutional approach that constructs
section 10(1)
read with
section 11
and
12
in a manner consistent with section 39(2) of the
Constitution required the adoption of an interpretation of a “
debt
”
that is the least likely to interfere with the right of access to
Court enshrined by section 34 of the Constitution;
c.
the
meaning given to “
debt
”
in
Desai
was
inconsistent with the Appellate Division’s earlier judgment in
Stewarts
and Lloyds
[10]
which
was more circumscribed and holds that a “
debt
”
means the discharge of that which is owed or due whether measured in
terms of money, goods or services that one person is
under an
obligation to pay or render to another.
[29]
While
the majority judgment in
Makate
signalled
a clear transformative intent to bring the law of extinctive
prescription in line with constitutional values, the facts
before the
Court in
Makate
ultimately
did not require a more precise delineation of what constitutes a
“
debt
”
as envisaged in section 10 since the claim was one that lay beyond
the scope of the term as used in
Stewarts
and Lloyds
.
[11]
The
definition adopted in
Stewarts
and Lloyds
has however withstood constitutional scrutiny from the Courts in both
Makate
[12]
and
Sanbonani
and remains good law today with the result that the obligation that
underpins a debt represents something more than an obligation
to make
payment of money.
[13]
It includes an obligation arising in contract for specific
performance.
[30]
The first
three prayers of the notice of motion can loosely be described as
orders that owe their genesis to the contractual rights
the applicant
believes he enjoys under the sale of business agreement to insist on
a transfer of the members interest in Crest
Car Hire. They seek to
give practical effect to this right.
[31]
A proper
characterisation of the relief leads to the conclusion that the claim
is one for specific performance of a contractual
obligation that
entitled the applicant to demand the registration of the members
interest in his name on his interpretation of
the agreement.
[32]
The
fact that the right concerns an incorporeal movable
[14]
that finds expression in the members interest of a close corporation
does not alter the fact that the contractual obligation to
effect
transfer, assuming for a moment the applicant is correct in his
interpretation, constitutes a “
debt
”
within the meaning of the
Prescription Act.
[15
]
[33]
Prescription begins to run as soon
as the debt is due, but as provided in
section 12(3)
of the
Prescription Act, a
debt does not become due until the creditor has
knowledge of the identity of the debtor and of the facts from which
the debt arises,
provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have
such knowledge if he could have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care.
[34]
When
does a claim for specific performance fall due? Our law recognises a
general principle that a right to claim performance under
a contract
becomes due according to the terms of the contract or, if the
contract is silent on this score, within a reasonable
time, which in
appropriate circumstances, can be immediately.
[16]
[35]
To the sale of
business agreement, I turn.
[36]
As
emerges from clause 4.1, Crest Car Hire sold to the applicant who
purchased the subject matter of the sale as a going concern
under one
indivisible transaction with effect from the “
Effective
Date
”
which was defined in clause 2.26 to mean 1 August 2012, from which
date the risk and benefit attaching to the subject matter
passed to
the applicant.
[17]
[37]
The purchase
price of R84 000.00 was payable over a period of twenty-four months
but this did not suspend the right of the applicant
to insist on
transfer of the
merx
.
Clause 9 bears repetition in full:
“
9.1
On the
Effective Date, the Seller shall:
9.1.1
P
lace the
Purchaser in occupation, possession and effective and legal control
of the
Subject
Matter;
9.1.2
Deliver to the
Purchaser all available documents constituting evidence of ownership
of the assets by the Seller;
9.1.3
The
Seller and/or the Purchaser shall sign such documents and do all such
steps that may be necessary or desirable generally to
facilitate the
implementation of this Agreement and all achievement of its intent
and purpose
.”
[38]
Mr Hollander submitted that
performance was immediately due by Crest Car Hire, which in this case
was the effective date of 1 August
2012. There is merit in this
submission, particularly if regard is had to clause 9.1.3 which
obliged Crest Car Hire to take all
necessary steps to implement the
sale of business agreement from 1 August 2012.
[39]
It
follows
that delivery of the subject matter of the sale was not suspended
until a later date, but became immediately claimable at
the instance
of the applicant from 1 August 2012. The facts are therefore to be
distinguished from those instances where the right
to claim
performance only arises upon the occurrence of some future event,
such as the expiry of a maintenance contract as was
the case in
Stewarts and Lloyds
or the payment of the purchase price in full.
[40]
In her heads
of argument, Ms Matome submitted that the debt only became due on 10
July 2018 when the members interest in Crest Car
Hire was
transferred
to the first respondent with the result that the commencement of this
application was within three years thereafter
and had the effect of
interrupting the running of prescription. When distilled to its
essence, the argument treats the transfer
of the membership interest
to the first respondent as Brenner’s heir as having created a
new debt.
[41]
I am not persuaded that these
submissions are correct.
[42]
Wh
ere
a debtor refuses to perform after the debt becomes due according to
the terms of the contract, the failure to perform does not
constitute
a new debt unless the creditor cancels the contract, in which event,
a new debt is created comprising the right to claim
restitution
and/or damages which becomes due when the right of cancelation is
exercised – that is, when the election to cancel
is
communicated to the debtor.
[18]
If the creditor does not exercise the election and the contractual
relationship remains intact as was the case here, the
breach
of contract does not create a new cause of action for specific
performance with a claim for specific performance one rooted
in the
contents of the contract, although instituted upon the counterparty’s
failure to perform.
[19]
[43]
As
the contractual obligation which the applicant considers to be due to
him to give effect to the transfer of the members interest
in Crest
Car Hire at all times remained extant since the applicant did not
cancel the sale of business agreement, no new debt was
created
on 10 July 2018. This is even
in
the face of what the applicant considers to have been a breach of
contract on this date when the members register of the close
corporation was impermissibly amended according to him to reflect the
first respondent as the member.
[20]
[44]
The
debt that forms the subject of the application was immediately
claimable on 1 August 2012 and it was incumbent on the applicant
to
take steps to interrupt the running of prescription through the
service of a legal process on Crest Car Hire within three years
from
this date to demand transfer of the members interest into his name
when he had knowledge of the identity of his true debtor
and the
facts from which the debt arose. He could not defer the running of
prescription by refraining from making demand for specific
performance.
[21]
[45]
Neither does
it assist the applicant to argue that proceedings were commenced in
2020 which had the effect of interrupting the running
of
prescription. It will be recalled that the proceedings brought in
2020 were only instituted against the first and second respondents
and the Master. Service of the application on the first and second
respondent acting in their capacities as executors of Brenner’s
estate did not have the effect of interrupting the running of
prescription against Crest Car Hire.
[46]
Service of
process on a member of a close corporation does not interrupt the
running of prescription where the debtor is the corporation
and the
argument to the contrary which the applicant appears to advance,
ignores the separate juristic personality of a close corporation
which enjoys statutory in
section 2
of the Close Corporations Act.
The section holds that a close corporation formed in accordance with
the statute
is on registration a
juristic person and continues to exist as a juristic person,
notwithstanding changes in its membership.
[47]
For this reason, there is no merit
in Ms Matome’s alternative argument that the death of Brenner
on 23 June 2015 delayed the
running of prescription.
Section 13(1)(h)
deals with the delay in the running of prescription where the
creditor or the debtor is deceased and an executor of the estate
has
not yet been appointed but is of no application here. Neither Brenner
nor his executors are debtors of the applicant since
the only parties
to the sale of business agreement were the applicant and Crest Car
Hire.
[48]
Ms Matome finally made what can only
be described as a courageous argument in her heads of argument to
bring her client within the
ambit of
section 12(2)
of the
Prescription Act which
delays the running of prescription if the
debtor wilfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of the
existence of the debt
until such time as the creditor becomes aware
of the existence of the debt.
[49]
There is no evidence that Crest Car
Hire wilfully prevented the applicant from learning of the existence
of the debt. Indeed,
the viability of such a construct appears
implausible because the claim is one for specific performance with
the facts surrounding
the transfer of Brenner’s members
interest to the first respondent on 10 July 2018 not an element of
the claim for specific
performance that arose on 1 August 2012.
Whether the events of 10 July 2018 were wilfully concealed or not,
even on a most benevolent
construction and when these facts came to
the attention of the applicant, is irrelevant.
[50]
The more fundamental difficulty
facing the applicant is that the facts that underpin the applicant’s
reliance on
section 12(2)
have not been pleaded in response to the
defence of prescription.
[51]
Where an applicant wishes to mount a
cognisable response to a special plea or point
in
limine
that raises prescription as a
defence, it is necessary if a finding of prescription is to be
avoided, that the supporting facts
intended to meet the prescription
defence be pleaded with sufficient particularity. This not only
assists the Court in understanding
the precise outline of the issues
in dispute and that it is required to pronounce upon, but speaks to
the question of
audi.
The
party raising prescription may well want to deal with the facts
pleaded in reply that respond to the defence of prescription.
[52]
One
can envisage those instances where if reliance is squarely placed on
section 12(2)
in a replying affidavit, the debtor accused of having
wilfully prevented the creditor from coming to know of the existence
of the
debt
,
may
want to traverse those allegations in an issuable manner by way of a
further affidavit. It is difficult to see that this would
violate the
ordinary practice of three sets of affidavits in motion proceedings
as something new emerged in the replying affidavit
for the first time
which excludes
mala
fides
or the need to give an explanation for why this was not raised at an
earlier stage.
[22]
[53]
The debtor is denied the opportunity
of dealing with these allegations that rest on
section 12(2)
if they
are not pleaded in the replying affidavit in answer to the defence of
prescription.
[54]
Not having raised these allegations
in the papers before me, I am not prepared to consider a defence that
seeks to overcome prescription
based on allegations that speak to the
application of
section 12(2)
of the
Prescription Act.
[55
]
In view of the conclusion that I
have come to, it is not necessary to consider the merits of the
declaratory relief claimed in prayers
four and five which are
rendered academic by the finding of prescription.
[56]
Declaratory
orders are discretionary in nature and Courts do not issue them when
deciding points that are merely abstract, academic
or
hypothetical.
[23]
The practical utility of interrogating whether the sale of business
agreement is valid and included as its subject the members
interest
in Crest Car Hire is rendered moot as the conclusion I have come to
is that the claim to demand transfer of the members
interest
prescribed three years after 1 August 2012.
[57]
As the claim against Crest Car Hire
has prescribed with the consequence that any rights arising from the
sale of business agreement
capable of enforcement have been
extinguished, t
here is no need to say
anything further about this part of the relief whether on the merits
or for purposes of the declaratory relief.
It does not advance the
rights of the parties any further.
[58]
I can but only add that as there is
no privity of contract between the applicant and the first and second
respondents, no grounds
exist to order any relief against them. I did
not understand the applicant’s case to be premised on any basis
outside the
confines of the sale of business agreement.
[59]
I accordingly make an order in the
following terms:
[1]
The point
in
limine
is upheld.
[2]
The application is dismissed with costs.
C BESTER AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
16 November 2023
Supplementary
Heads of Argument: 6 & 11 December 2023
Delivered:
18 March 2024
For
the Applicant: M
Matome
Jurgens Bekker Attorneys
For
the First, Second & Fourth Respondents: L
Hollander
Gjersoe
Attorneys
[1]
Notice
of Motion, prayers 1 and 2, 001-5.
[2]
Notice
of Motion, prayer 3, 001-5.
[3]
Notice
of Motion, prayer 4, 001-6.
[4]
Notice
of Motion, prayer 5, 001-6.
[5]
FA,
para 8.10, CaseLines 01-11 to 01-12.
[6]
FA,
para 8.11, CaseLines 01-12.
[7]
CaseLines,
RA, para 4.2, 001-117.
[8]
Oertel
en Andere NNO v Direkteur van Plaaslike Bestuur en Andere
1983 1 SA 354
(A) at
370B;
Desai
NO v Desai and Others
1996
1 SA 141
(A)
[9]
At
147H-I.
[10]
Electricity
Supply Commission v Stewarts and Lloyds of SA (Pty)
Ltd
1981
3 SA 340
(A) at
344F-G;
[11]
The
majority in
Makate
at paragraph 92 characterised the claim as one for an order forcing
Vodacom
to
commence negotiations with Makate to determine the amount of
compensation due to him for
the
use of his idea which turned out to be financially rewarding.
[12]
At
150B-H.
[13]
At
17G-H.
[14]
See
section 30(1) of the Close Corporations Act which defines a members
interest as movable
property
comprising a single interest expressed as a percentage. See also
Carlzeil Properties (Pty)
Limited
v Goncalves and Others
2000
(3) SA 739 (T).
[15]
See
also the later decision of the Constitutional Court in
Ethekwini
Municipality v Mounthaven
(Pty)
Limited
2019
(4) SA 394
(CC) at 400A.
[16]
See
the decision of Wunsh J in
Munnikhuis
v Melamed NO
1998 (3) SA 873
(W) at 887E-F. The
full
Court also comprised Cameron J (as he then was) and Fevrier AJ.
[17]
Clause
4.1.3, 001-19.
[18]
Munnikhuis
at
887I to 888A;
HMBMP
Properties (Pty) Limited v King
1981 (1) SA 906
(N) at 912H;
see
also Christie’s Law of Contract in South Africa, Eighth
Edition, page 600.
[19]
Munnikhuis
at
887J.
[20]
FA,
para 8.12 and para 8.13, 00-12.
[21]
Mahomed
v Yssel and Others
1963 (1) SA 866
(D) at 870G.
[22]
See
Erasmus
Superior
Court Practice
RS
22, 2023, D1 Rule 6-31
regarding
the filing of further
affidavits.
[23]
Minister
of Finance v Oakbay Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others; Oakbay
Investments (Pty) Ltd
and
Others v Director of the Financial Intelligence Centre
2018 (3) SA 515
(GP)
at para 78.
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