Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 434South Africa
Salcarb KZN (Pty) Ltd v Ikwezi Mining (Pty) Ltd (2024/043364) [2024] ZAGPJHC 434 (6 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Salcarb KZN (Pty) Ltd v Ikwezi Mining (Pty) Ltd (2024/043364) [2024] ZAGPJHC 434 (6 May 2024)
Salcarb KZN (Pty) Ltd v Ikwezi Mining (Pty) Ltd (2024/043364) [2024] ZAGPJHC 434 (6 May 2024)
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sino date 6 May 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024 – 043364
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In
the application by
SALCARB
KZN (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
IKWEZI
MINING (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Urgent applications –
rule 6 (12) – applicant approached court after exhausting
attempts to liaise with respondent –
case made out for hearing
in the urgent court
Affidavit evidence –
disputes of fact – bald denials
Deponent required to
answer point of substance and must not be evasive
Order
[1]
In this matter I made the following order on 3 May 2024:
1.
It
is declared that the Applicant has been deprived of access to the
property situate at Dundee Coal Mine on Commercial Road, R33,
DundeeKwazulu-Natal (“the Property”) by:-
1.1.
the
Respondent; and
1.2.
Mr.
Santanu Chakraboty, Mr. Nitin Agrawal and Mr. Prosper Nkala,
employees or officers of the Respondent.
2.
The
Respondent and anyone under their mandate, including the persons
referred to in paragraph 1.2 above and any of the Respondent’s
employees or officers, are ordered and directed forthwith to:-
2.1.
restore the status quo ante by allowing the Applicant and its
employees, contractors and agents to enter and exit the Property; and
2.2.
refrain from preventing the Applicant and its employees,
contractors and agents from bringing in or taking out equipment and
material
to and from the Property;
3.
Costs,
on scale B.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This is a judgement in the urgent court. The applicant seeks a
spoliation order. It seeks an order that possession of
the Dundee
Coalmine situate on Commercial Road on the R33 in Dundee be restored
to it and that the respondent be interdicted from
preventing the
applicant from bringing equipment and material onto the property and
from removing equipment and material from the
property.
[4]
The registered address of the respondent is in Midrand within the
geographical area of jurisdiction of this Court.
Founding
affidavit
[5]
Ms Vermaak, the general manager of the applicant, alleges in the
founding affidavit that the applicant conducts its business
at the
property and that the respondent has refused the applicant access to
and egress from the property. This prevents the applicant
from moving
materials to and from the site.
[6]
The applicant’s predecessor entered into an agreement with the
respondent’s predecessor in 2014 and in 2018
the applicant
stepped into the shoes of its predecessor. The respondent purchased
the mining business and the property in 2022
with knowledge of the
lease. It now operates a coal mine at the property.
[7]
The deponent met with Mr Banerjee, the former general manager of the
respondent to discuss the continuation of the business
of the
applicant shortly after the take-over. The business consists of a
processing plant that processes anthracite. However, disputes
arose
between the applicant and the respondent.
[8]
The applicant was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of its
business on the property when the respondent took steps
on 8 April
2024 to deprive it of possession. The respondent instructed its staff
to prevent the applicant from bringing out or
taking in any material
or equipment from the property. The applicant was therefore prevented
from having its trucks enter or leave
the property. The respondent
did so without a court order.
[9]
On Friday, 19 April 2024 the applicant caused a letter of demand to
be sent to the respondent demanding that it refrained
from its
conduct. No response was received. The applicant initiated the
application on Monday the 22
nd
. The applicant states that
between the 8
th
and the letter of the 19
th
it
attempted to negotiate a resolution to the dispute but that these
attempts failed. I deal with the question of urgency under
a separate
heading below.
Answering
affidavit
[10]
In the answering affidavit deposed to by Mr Bonani Ndlovu, a director
of the respondent, the respondent relies on misjoinder
and
essentially denies any business or other relationship with the
applicant or any involvement with or interest in the property.
The
answering affidavit consists largely of a “no knowledge”
defence.
The
deponent denies that the respondent operates a mine on the property,
that the respondent purchased the mining business and the
property,
and that it spoliated the applicant. In short, the respondent denies
any interest in or involvement with the property
or the business of
the applicant at the property, or in the relief sought. The
respondent comes to the litigation as a self-proclaimed
stranger.
Replying
affidavit and respondent’s further affidavit
[11]
In the replying affidavit the applicant presents evidence to
substantiate its averment that the respondent carries on
business at
the property and is the party that spoliated the applicant. This
evidence was not included in the founding affidavit
as, so submits
the applicant, it was not foreseen that the respondent’s role
would be contentious, but the evidence was then
presented in the
replying affidavit in response to the denial of ownership or
involvement by the respondent.
[12]
The
applicant brought an application that certain paragraphs and
annexures
[1]
of the answering
affidavit be struck on the ground that the averments constitute new
evidence in reply, and in the alternative
that the respondent be
permitted to file a further affidavit. The striking out application
was argued and I ordered that the respondent
be granted leave to file
a further affidavit by 18h00 on 1 May 2024 and that the matter stand
down to Thursday, 2 May 2024 at 14h00.
I was of the view that the
applicant could not reasonably foresee the applicant’s denial
of any involvement with the property
and should be permitted to deal
with the respondent’s denials in reply, but that the respondent
ought to be granted leave
to respond to the evidence in a further
affidavit.
[13]
The respondent duly filed its further affidavit on 1 May 2024 and the
applicant did not deem it necessary to file a further
affidavit in
response. The new averments in the replying affidavit are therefore
properly before court and must be read with the
respondent’s
further affidavit.
[14]
In paragraph 16 of the founding affidavit the applicant refers to Mr
Somdeb Banerjee as the former general manager of
the respondent. In
paragraph 51 of the answering affidavit the respondent denies that Mr
Banerjee was a former general manager
of the respondent or that he
was authorised to conclude any agreements on behalf of the
respondent. The deponent does not admit
to any knowledge of Mr
Banerjee and the applicant deals with this in reply:
On
30 May 2023 Mr Banerjee, the Director: Mining Business Units of
Ikwezi Mining, wrote to the applicant referring to discussions
and
pricing policy.
[2]
His email was
copied to officers of the respondent, including Mr Nitin Agrawal who
is a director, and the respondent can hardly
deny knowledge of him.
The respondent however fails to disclose and deal with the fact that
Mr Banerjee does exist and was indeed
a senior officer of the
respondent with the title of Director: Mining Business Units.
In
the further affidavit the respondents merely denies that Mr Banerjee
represented the respondent without dealing with the email
of 30 May
2023. While the evidence that he was not a former general manager
might be true, the evidence given is evasive and misleading.
The
respondent failed to deal with Mr Banerjee’s role in the
further affidavit.
[15]
It is also apparent from the email communication on 30 May 2023 that
despite the respondent’s denial of any relationship
between the
parties and despite its denial of any knowledge of a Mr Banerjee, the
respondent wrote to the applicant about the business
relationship
between the parties and informed the applicant of price increases. It
is noteworthy that when denying as ownership
of the property the
respondent does not allege that any associated business is in fact
the owner of the property and is in fact
the entity standing in a
contractual relationship with the applicant. It merely denies any
business relationship and fails to make
a full disclosure and to
answer the points of substance.
[16] On 29 February
2024 Mr Santanu Chakraborty
in his capacity as
“
Sr General Manager”
of
the respondent sent an email from his electronic mail
address
[…]
to
the applicant.
He informs the applicant that the applicant -
“
is
at our premises without any agreement or any mutual agreed condition.
You are using our power, land, water and heat from Calcine
furnace.
No local purchase from us has happened in the last few months.
We
want have a meeting with you for discussion of all these issues.
@Prosper Nkala please schedule a team meeting with Marilise
[3]
on Monday. Mr Nitin
[4]
will also be part of that meeting.
Santanu
Chakraborty
Sr
General Manager
Ikwezi
Mining”
[17]
In this correspondence Mr Chakraborty states that the property with
which this application is concerned is the property
of the
respondent, that he is its senior general manager, and that the
applicant is occupying the property without permission.
The
respondent denies any knowledge of the statements. In respect of the
position of Mr Chakraborty as it appears from the correspondence
Mr
Ndlovu makes the bald statement in paragraph 16 of the further
affidavit that
“
I
deny that Mr Chakraborty is the senior general manager of the
respondent.”
No
explanation is provided as to why it is that Mr Chakraborty
identifies himself as the senior general manager of the respondent
and that he does so in communication copied to senior officers of the
respondent. These are Mr Prosper Nkala (Legal Counsel: Mining
Business Units) and Mr Nitin Agrawal (director) The averment that the
property belong to the respondent is similarly not dealt
with. It is
also not the case for the respondent that Mr Chakraborty’s
emails are forgeries or that his claim to a senior
position within
the respondent is denied by the respondent in any other forum.
[18]
Mr
Chakraborty wrote a further electronic mail message on 7 March 2024
where he refers to a meeting with Ms Vermaak and he is again
identified as the senior general manager of the respondent with an
email address
s[…]
[19]
On 12 March
2024 Ms Vermaak wrote to Mr Chakraborty, Mr Agrawal (who has an
@Ikwezi email address), and Mr Nkala (who has an @buffalocoal
email
address as well as an @ikwezi email address) again dealing with the
relationship between the parties.
[5]
It is clear from the context that Buffalo Coal is an entity related
to or associated with the respondent. Mr Nkala and Mr Agrawal
represent both firms. Mr Nkala is the legal counsel of the respondent
and a director of Bufalo Coal Dundee (Pty) Ltd; Mr Agrawal
is a
director of both firms.
[20]
On 8 April
2024 Ms Rolene Will of Buffalo Coal wrote to Ms Vermaak referring to
a request received from Mr Santanu Chakraborty and
relating to a
reconciliation of product “loaded” by the applicant.
[6]
In the email she is making enquiries on behalf of Mr Chakraborty.
This email also reflects the spoliation alleged by the applicant.
She
writes that –
“
He
[Mr Chakraborty]
has instructed that Salcarb
[the
applicant]
may not bring or collect any material until this
reconciliation has been received.”
[21]
On 11 April
2024 a WhatsApp message was sent to Mr Chakraborty requesting him to
permit trucks to leave the property with loads.
A response was
received.
[7]
It read:
“
Good
day, let me check with our management.”
[22]
A further
WhatsApp message was sent on the 16
th
to Mr Chakraborty again requesting access for the trucks. On 17 April
2024 Ms Vermaak sent an email
[8]
to Mr Chakraborty and Mr Agrawal of the respondent stating that
“
truck
access has been stopped since 8 April 2024 by Santanu without notice.
This action is resulting in us running at a loss jeopardising
our
company’s survival. I have tried contacting Santanu via what’s
app and email meeting request this week, but he
has not responded to
me at all. Please can you assist in allowing trucks to enter collect
material from our plant to supply to
our customers.”
[23]
On 22 April
2024 Mr Nkala informed the applicant that its court application would
be opposed. Mr Nkala’s email was copied
to Mr Chakraborty and
Mr Agrawal.
[9]
[24]
The failure to deal pertinently with the respondent’s role and
the role played by its officers was explained by
its counsel during
argument by stating that the deponent to the respondent’s
affidavits, Mr Ndlovu, simply did not know all
the facts even though
he was a director of the respondent. This is not a satisfactory
explanation. A party to litigation cannot
appoint a person to depose
to an affidavit on its behalf even though that person does not have
personal knowledge of all the facts
and events and if need be a
litigant should attach more than one affidavit by people who
collectively do have personal knowledge
and can speak to the facts.
It may of course happen that a deponent’s personal knowledge is
selective but then the shortcomings
in his or her knowledge must be
dealt with by others and he or she must identify the aspects he or
she can not testify to.
[25]
Mr Agrawal and Mr Nkala signed confirmatory affidavits. They merely
confirm the contents of the affidavits by Mr Ndlovu
and take the
matter no further.
Analysis
[26]
Witnesses providing evidence are expected to testify not only to the
truth, but to the whole truth and nothing but the
truth. Half-truths
are not acceptable and are likely misleading. When for instance a
person is referred to as a former general
manager but is in fact not
the general manager but rather the director of mining business units,
it is not enough for the opposing
party to merely deny that the
person referred to is the general manager is the general manager
without also stating that he or
she is in fact the director of mining
business units. The half- truth does not suffice.
[27]
It is not
permissible for a respondent to rely merely on bare denials without
answering the point of substance. Evidence must be
to the point and
the deponent must not be evasive. In
Wightman t/a
JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[10]
Hefer JA said:
[13] A real, genuine
and bona fide dispute of fact can exist only where the court is
satisfied that the party who purports to raise
the dispute has in his
affidavit
seriously and unambiguously addressed the fact
said to be disputed
. There will of course be instances
where a bare denial meets the requirement because there is no other
way open to the disputing
party and nothing more can therefore be
expected of him. But even that may not be sufficient if the fact
averred lies purely within
the knowledge of the averring party and no
basis is laid for disputing the veracity or accuracy of the
averment. When the
facts averred are such that the disputing party
must necessarily possess knowledge of them and be able to
provide an answer (or countervailing evidence) if they be not true or
accurate but, instead of doing so, rests his case on a bare or
ambiguous denial the court will generally have difficulty in finding
that the test is satisfied
. I say 'generally' because
factual averments seldom stand apart from a broader matrix of
circumstances all of which needs to be
borne in mind when arriving at
a decision. A litigant may not necessarily recognise or understand
the nuances of a bare or general
denial as against a real attempt to
grapple with all relevant factual allegations made by the other
party. But when he signs the
answering affidavit, he commits himself
to its contents, inadequate as they may be, and will only in
exceptional circumstances
be permitted to disavow them. There is thus
a serious duty imposed upon a legal adviser who settles an answering
affidavit to
ascertain and engage with facts which his
client disputes and to reflect such disputes fully and accurately in
the answering affidavit
. If that does not happen it should
come as no surprise that the court takes a robust view of the
matter.”
[emphasis added]
[28]
The respondent does not deal satisfactorily with the averments that
it was Mr Chakraborty, identified as the senior general
manager of
the respondent, who claimed that the property with which this
application is concerned is the property of the respondent.
The email
referred to of 29 February 2024 is merely met with a bald denial that
he is the general manager of the respondent. The
applicant cannot be
blamed for accepting the words of the general manager at face value
and identifying the respondent as the owner
of the property.
[29]
This is a spoliation application and the ownership of the property
need not be decided. The applicant is not seeking
an order to enforce
contractual terms but it seeks to exercise the possessory rights it
exercised before 8 April 2024.
[30]
Possession
is a question of fact. A spoliation order is a possessory remedy.
[11]
The purpose of a spoliation order is not to finally determine the
rights and obligations of the parties but to restore the
status
quo ante
.
[12]
The person in possession
[13]
of property may not be ejected without due process of law. An
applicant seeking a spoliation order is required to allege and prove
that it was in peaceful and undisturbed possession (or occupation)
of, in this case, immovable property and that it was deprived
of
possession by the respondent. Van Loggerenberg writes:
[14]
“
The reason
behind the practice of granting spoliation orders is that no man is
allowed to take the law into his own hands, and to
dispossess another
illicitly of possession of property. If he does so, the court will
summarily restore the status quo ante,
and will do that as a
preliminary to any inquiry or investigation into the merits of the
dispute.
The rule is
spoliatus ante omnia restituendus
est.
A court hearing a spoliation application does not concern
itself with the rights of the parties (whatever they may have been)
before
the spoliation took place; it merely inquires whether or not
there has been a spoliation, and if there has been, it restores
the status
quo ante. In spoliation proceedings the court
will, therefore, neither enter
into the lawfulness of the
applicant’s possession, nor into the question of ownership.
The court will not consider any claim in reconvention, such as a
claim for a declaratory order on the respondent’s rights to
the
property.”
[footnotes omitted]
[31]
Exclusive
possession is not required.
[15]
The mandament van spolie is available to a litigant deprived of
quasi
possessio
such as the exercise of a right to enter upon property.
[16]
Restoration of
quasi
possessio
takes
place by allowing the applicant the exercise of the right of which it
has been despoiled.
Quasi
possessio
takes place by the exercise of a right (such as the right to enter
upon property) and dispossession of the right amounts to spoliation.
However, the applicant need not prove that it
has
the right but merely that it
exercised
the right. The right so exercised must be in the nature of a
‘
gebruiksreg
,’
an incident of the possession or control of the property.
[17]
The
entitlement
to the right is, again, something to be decided separately and
independently of the spoliation of the application
[32]
The mandament may also be used to order the respondent to do
something in addition to the mere putting of the spoliated
applicant
back in possession. What must be restored is the
status quo ante
.
The purpose is to place the parties in the position they were in
immediately before the spoliation occurred.
[33]
The applicant is required to prove its case on a balance of
probabilities and the order has the effect of a final judgement.
It
is not sufficient for the applicant to make out a
prima facie
case only.
[34]
As already stated the rights and obligations of the parties need not
be determined in this spoliation application. The
question of an
underlying contract relates to the underlying rights and obligations.
The issue to be determined in this application
is whether or not
applicant enjoyed possession of the property and if so, whether the
respondent interfered in such use and enjoyment.
The respondent is of
course a company and only acts through people, namely its directors,
its staff, its officers, and its agents.
It similarly does not matter
whether or not these people also work for or represent other legal
entities. A director or employee
of the company can, in other words
not spoliate a party and then defend its action by saying that it was
also acting on behalf
of another company.
[35]
In this matter the respondent denies that it is the owner of the
property, that it was ever in possession of the property,
that it
ever entered into agreements with a previous owner to purchase the
property, that it has any staff at the property, and
that it ever
instructed anybody to refuse the applicant access to the property. In
short, the respondent denies that it was properly
joined to the
application and alleges that its joinder was a misjoinder. Its bald
denials are not consistent with the facts and
its affidavits are
evasive.
Urgency
[36]
A
spoliation application must be brought within a reasonable period of
time and this the applicant has done.
[18]
The alleged spoliation took place on 8 April and the application was
launched on the 22
nd
.
The more pressing question is whether the applicant makes out a case
for urgent relief in terms of rule 6 (12). An urgent application
must
be brought as soon as possible and an applicant must not be the
author of the delay in bringing the application.
[19]
An applicant is not dilatory however when it takes reasonable steps
before bringing the application to seek the co-operation of
the
respondent.
[20]
[37]
The applicant complains that it was spoliated on 8 April 2024 when
the respondent deprived it of its possession by instructing
its
personnel to prevent the personnel of the applicant from bringing in
or taking out equipment or material from the property,
and the
personnel acted accordingly.
[38]
The act of spoliation was confirmed in the email sent by Ms Rolene
Will on 8 April 2024 quoted above. Two days later,
on the 11
th
,
the applicant requested Mr Chakraborty by way of a WhatsApp message
to permit trucks to leave and he undertook to consult with
management. On the 16
th
a further WhatsApp message was
sent stating that
“
without
deliveries we are facing closure of the business. Please can you
allow access for trucks to uplift material.”
[39]
On the 17
th
the applicant sent an email to Mr Agrawal, one
of the three directors of the respondent, to seek his assistance. The
email was
copied to Mr Chakraborty. Then on the 19
th
the
applicant’s attorney sent a letter of demand to Mr Chakraborty
and this elicited a response from the respondent’s
legal
counsel (Mr Nkala) to say that the threatened application had no
merit and that the urgency was
“
self-created
and/or imagined.”
[40] I am satisfied
that the applicant acted with due diligence and took reasonable steps
to avoid having to approach the
court for relief.
Conclusion
[41] The applicant
had access to and the use of the property with which the application
is concerned. It is entitled therefore
to have its vehicles enter and
leave the property, to occupy and use the property as it did before 8
April 2024, and to remove
its equipment and material. In this regard
the applicant’s counsel conceded that the relationship is over
but that the applicant
requires access to remove its equipment and
material from the property. The underlying contractual arrangements,
if any, need not
concern this court.
[42] The applicant
is therefore entitled to the order it seeks, including an order for
costs on scale B. I grant such an order.
MOORCROFT
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
6 MAY 2024
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
JG
BOTHA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
LE
MOTTĒE ROSSLE ATORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE SECOND RESPONDENT:
K
MASHISHI
INSTRUCTED
BY:
WERKSMANS
ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
29
APRIL & 2 MAY 2024
DATE
OF ORDER:
3
MAY 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
6
MAY 2024
[1]
Paras 7.1, 7.2, 7.4, and 11.2, and annexures MV3 to MV12.
[2]
A copy of the email is annexed to the replying affidavit of
the applicant as MV12.
[3]
The respondent’s general manager and deponent to the
founding and replying affidavit.
[4]
Mr Nitin Agrawal, director of the respondent.
[5]
MV6.
[6]
MV7.
[7]
MV8.
[8]
MV9.
[9]
MV11.
[10]
Wightman t/a
JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA). See also
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T) 1163 and 1164. See also
Peterson
v Cuthbert & Co Ltd
1945
AD 420
at 428–9;
Soffiantini
v Mould
1956
(4) SA 150 (E)
154;
Engar
v Omar Salem Essa Trust
1970
(1) SA 77
(N) 83E;
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) 634I–635A;
Tsenoli
v State President of the Republic of South Africa
1992
(3) SA 37
(D) 41E–F
[11]
Blendrite
(Pty) Ltd v Moonisami
2021
(5) SA 61
(SCA) para 6.
[12]
Bon
Quelle (Edms) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Otavi
1989 (1) SA 508 (A) 512.
[13]
See
Dennegeur
Estate Homeowners Association and Another v Telkom SA SOC Ltd
2019 (4) SA 451
(SCA) para 10.
[14]
See
Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
vol 2, 2
nd
ed. 2023 D7-1 et seq
.
The quoted phrase is at D7-2.
[15]
Nienaber
v Stuckey
1946 AD 1049
at 1055.
[16]
In
Nienaber
v Stuckey
1946 AD 1049
the Appeal Court was seized with the possession of a
right of access through a gate. See page 10, penultimate paragraph.
[17]
See
FirstRand
td t/a Rand Merchant Bank and Another v Scholtz NO and Others
2008 (2) SA 503
(SCA) paras 12 to 13 and
Zulu
v Minister of Works, KwaZulu, and Others
1992 (1) SA 181 (D).
[18]
Jivan
v National Housing Commission
1977
(3) SA 890
(W) 893;
Nienaber
v Stuckey
1946
AD 1049
at 1059–60; Le
Riche
v PSP Properties CC
2005
(3) SA 189
(C) 198E–F..
[19]
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004
(2) SA 81 (SE)
94C–D
; Stock
v Minister of Housing
2007
(2) SA 9
(C) 12I–13A
;
Kumah v Minister of Home Affairs
2018
(2) SA 510
(GJ) 511D–E.
[20]
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004 (2) SA 81
(SE) 94C.
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